melrose40yarder
Well-Known Member
Is the correct statement.Fuck emThe City/County duoists are weird as fuck or have very short memories. I was laughing my cock off when they nearly went out of business.
Is the correct statement.Fuck emThe City/County duoists are weird as fuck or have very short memories. I was laughing my cock off when they nearly went out of business.
Groundhoppers aren't a new phenomenon.ubers who vlog about local to them non league football plus plenty of vids uploaded from the new phenomenon of Groundhoppers - people who collect visits to grounds like pin badges - I don't see the joy derived from that but I suspect that is grounded in the fact that my Dad first took me to Maine Road in 1967 aged 6 ( we stood - YES STOOD in the North Stand before it was redeveloped.
However I can see with the rising costs of attending PL and even Championship games can get people disillusioned and look elsewhere for live football. I have to say I have lived in a couple of places in the country and was always dismayed by the proliferation of rag and dippers shirts when they had a perfectly good local team to support - I s
Groundhoppers aren't a new phenomenon.
People has been deliberately doing the 92 since at least the 80s.
The topic is not about City fans going to the occasional league game but 'turning to'.
And it's also not true. Premier League attendances are at record highs and City will hit a new record this season.
West didsbury & chorlton get a good crowd I heard not sure about the beer situationI'm a ST holder down in Sale and I've been to Altrincham a couple of times when we haven't a home game, as away tickets are impossible to get.......and it's easy to get to on the Tram. I quite like not having a 90 min commute each way to a game and back.
I'd consider going more often but I'd like to find a club near M33 that allows me to have a pint while watching the game.
I know it's not exactly the same thing, but I've also started to watch the egg chasers at Heywood Road. Unreserved seating, £21 a ticket and a pitchside bar and it's a 10 min wlk away :)
err Chelsea, like everyone else...This begs the question "where were you when we were shit?"
You can have a beer whilst watching the game,Warfsteiner plus cans of Burton Rd pale ale from memoryWest didsbury & chorlton get a good crowd I heard not sure about the beer situation
There's multiple reasons people might have, or be turning to, a lower league team.
I myself have always had other teams i follow and support, nowhere near the same as City in any way, but i do (e.g. Altrincham, Stockport, Lancaster and Morecambe, over the years). Many many football fans do.
As Premier League football gets pricier and pricier, spending money on regularly attending City is either a) just too expensive on the bank account or b) morally ambiguous with player wages and mass commercialisation of the game. or a blend of both. Lower league football represents a chance of filling that void and being part of a Saturday match day get together without the same level of pressure.
You can have a beer watching the game, you can wander all 4 sides of the ground, you can mingle with away fans (mostly) and other such novelties (talking lower leagues here). Weirdly some of the best catering i've ever had at football has been conference level and below.
Post game transport, travel etc is nigh on stress free.
You can feel quite close to the club quite quickly, meet people involved or quickly know people who are related to the players etc, it gives you a sense of connection quite quickly, in direct comparison to top tier football.
it is what it is. I'll never not support City vehemently, but the attraction of lower league stuff is undeniable.
I don't really have a question, or a point to make here - just opening the topic for discussion really:
I'm a lifelong blue, as are all my Dad's side of the family (Mum's side are reds, but thankfully my Dad raised me football-wise). I'm originally from Stockport, so have a lot of friends and family still living there - I don't, I'm in Urmston now.
I have, however, seen a trend of people who have always supported Premier League teams turning their backs on their team and following a Lower League, and in some cases even Non-League, team instead. Not to say they don't support their PL team at all - but just seem to have more interest and passion in the lower league club they have chose - mostly, in my case, Stockport County. But I know some who have gone to Salford City, Oldham, Altrincham, and even West Didsbury & Chorlton. My Dad, Brother-in-Law and Nephew (all also lifelong City fans) have now got Season Tickets at Stockport, and when I asked my nephew about City's new away kit his exact words were, "I've not seen it - I'm getting County's though!"
Like I'm sure a lot of others are, I too have become a bit disillusioned with football at the very top - the amount of money involved is disgusting really (but that's a separate topic of conversation), the politics involved in ownership (poor Crystal Palace falling victim to this, just this summer), having to comply with various FFP/PSR rules, the constant changing of fixture dates and kick off times to suit the TV channels, the now infamous 115 charges etc. I just don't feel like I support a football club anymore - I feel like I support a business. The players lives are so far removed from the average fan that you just have no connection to them at all - whereas at County you can sometimes (not always, but reasonably often) meet and get photos with the players after the match.
Now, I'm not saying I'm going to go support County - I'm actually very disappointed that so many people I know have turned to them - but I can sort of see the appeal. 95% of the time your game kicks off at 3pm on a Saturday - your players are probably local-ish lads - they still earn good money but not hundreds of thousands of pounds a week - the new shirt doesn't cost £100. Part of me (a very small part) sort of hoped that the 115 charges would stick and we got dumped in the Vanarama North - then at least I can follow the lower league football without having to 'switch sides'.
I know this bleeds into the debate they were having on TalkSport a month or so ago, about whether you can support two teams - I don't think you can! I like Stockport, I hope they win - but I don't "support" them!
Just wondering what peoples thoughts are - is this a growing trend? Is the Premier League going to lose fans in its droves as people turn to a lower league club, and take their kids along with them (as with my nephew)? If so, will the Premier League step in and do something to bring them back? Are you seeing it happen too, or am I just friends with really un-loyal football fans? Are you/have you been tempted to go follow another club as well or instead of City?
Whilst true, this is happening via fan gentrification, replacing local fans that can't afford it with fans further afield who can and not always the same fan each week.