Oh yes, my badI thought that was MacKenna.
Oh yes, my badI thought that was MacKenna.
Fair point.Can’t it be both? ;-)
Weaver was up on his feet, ran about five yards, then turned to his team-mates to urge them to join him.
Then he set off, arms waving manically, leaping over an advertising hoarding, pulling at his mustard yellow goalkeeper's shirt before quickly realising, with his gloves on, there is no chance of getting it off. Round to the City fans to the side of the goal, down the side, back on to the pitch before running into the arms of team-mate Steve Morrison, who wrestled him to the ground, where the remainder of City's squad piled on top.
I wish that were the case for me and I am honestly very happy it is for you, GDM. I really do envy your situation.
Unfortunately , I’ve actually had some very unpleasant interactions with a few Liverpool supporters, several from right around Anfield, over the last few weeks and have just had a bit of a falling out with two members of my league team after they wanted me to admit that it’s “ethically wrong” to support City. One is a Liverpool supporter that’s never been to England much less Liverpool, and the other is a United supporter that sees himself as a bit of a moral crusader. I’ve also gotten comments off randoms when wearing my City shirt whilst walking my dog. Just the other day I was at Chelsea friendly here and a Liverpool supporter randomly sucker-punched a lad wearing a City shirt, screaming some awful things before running off (and this at a match where neither team were playing).
It’s worse here in Boston than most other places in America, of course, because of the Liverpool ties and the overcompensation for it being a particularly racist city in general, but I have heard from others living in Manchester, London, and a few places here in America that they are getting it, too.
I’ve talked about my run-ins in more detail elsewhere, including posting one of the messages from that Rag crusader in another thread, so I won’t go much further in to it, but suffice it to say, my particular experience has become one of almost weekly confrontations forcing me to defend supporting City. It’s getting tiring, to be honest.
I’ll keep doing it, but a part of me does miss the days of the immediate “oh, that’s my second club” response when nearly anyone other than a Rag heard that I supported City.
And I have found a large part of all of this is down to media portrayal, especially surrounding the FFP investigation and the more recent fervor surrounding our owners.
To be honest, most people I interact with are either also not from America, are first generation Americans whose families are from Europe or Africa, or love football more than American sport. That’s especially the case at my company (due to the nature of our work) and in the leagues I play in. We actually only have two Americans on my league team and one of them was born in Swaziland, with the other being from a military family who were based in Germany for much of his life. That’s definitely not the general public, of course, but it is the community I am apart of, which definitely means the topic comes up more than it would otherwise. And, as I mentioned in another post, the accent doesn’t help avoid the subject, as people are always looking to show they are in the know when it comes to things outside of America.Wow people trying to hurt you in America for a sport that’s probably no greater than tidly winks in their national sports. These people throwing punches were they Patriots or Golden state fans in the grand high scheme of things?
I would imagine anyone in the United States who follows the NBA, NFL or the NHLPA would be guilty of supporting a team or ‘franchise’ in their words would be guilty of supporting a financially doped sports team as that’s what it takes to keep them in the league never mind be competitive.
You also live in one of the least cloistered places in the States.To be honest, most people I interact with are either also not from America, are first generation Americans whose families are from Europe or Africa, or love football more than American sport. That’s especially the case at my company (due to the nature of our work) and in the leagues I play in. We actually only have two Americans on my league team and one of them was born in Swaziland, with the other being from a military family who were based in Germany for much of his life. That’s definitely not the general public, of course, but it is the community I am apart of, which definitely means the topic comes up more than it would otherwise. And, as I mentioned in another post, the accent doesn’t help avoid the subject, as people are always looking to show they are in the know when it comes to things outside of America.
And at the same time one of the most racist by many measures.You also live in one of the least cloistered places in the States.
you sound like a persecuted minority have you not got in touch with those pioneering human rights campaigners Harrrss brothersTo be honest, most people I interact with are either also not from America, are first generation Americans whose families are from Europe or Africa, or love football more than American sport. That’s especially the case at my company (due to the nature of our work) and in the leagues I play in. We actually only have two Americans on my league team and one of them was born in Swaziland, with the other being from a military family who were based in Germany for much of his life. That’s definitely not the general public, of course, but it is the community I am apart of, which definitely means the topic comes up more than it would otherwise. And, as I mentioned in another post, the accent doesn’t help avoid the subject, as people are always looking to show they are in the know when it comes to things outside of America.
To be honest, most people I interact with are either also not from America, are first generation Americans whose families are from Europe or Africa, or love football more than American sport. That’s especially the case at my company (due to the nature of our work) and in the leagues I play in. We actually only have two Americans on my league team and one of them was born in Swaziland, with the other being from a military family who were based in Germany for much of his life. That’s definitely not the general public, of course, but it is the community I am apart of, which definitely means the topic comes up more than it would otherwise. And, as I mentioned in another post, the accent doesn’t help avoid the subject, as people are always looking to show they are in the know when it comes to things outside of America.
Fair play to him, but he's still a ****.I had a united fan who used to go on about ‘unearned money’ defending our owners against the media onslaught the other day. Totally surreal.