Gorton_Tubster
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 2 Apr 2012
- Messages
- 19,064
- Location
- Riding the blue tidal wave.
- Team supported
- Manchester City
The flakiness of current footy fans. No balls, no shame about it.
i dont think that just applies to footie fans unfortunately.The flakiness of current footy fans. No balls, no shame about it.
They were a good team and wouldn't struggle according to the know nowts in the post match thread.That Norwich game a couple of years ago was a prime example. They beat us 3-2 then I think came 20th. Just fcking annoying,
An example of the way 'legacy' fans are treated these days.Man City v Man Utd women.
At the Etihad Stadium. 1pm on the Sunday for families is perfect.
The women need a big crowd with a big atmosphere behind them especially being at the men’s stadium.
Get’s moved to 6.45pm for TV
6.45pm on a Sunday night (no doubt cold & wet) with school the next day. Just f*ck off!
Until the 115/130 kick in and we are banished to the conference north....- The game is now way too over-coached, and you are seeing the true effects of this with the younger generation of footballers coming through. It seems every player now needs to find a "system" to thrive within and all ingenuity is nowhere to be seen for the most part in their game.
The only positive to this is that i think the mid-table level teams have got better because of it. I think the current set of best of the rest would decimate the best of the rest 20 years ago.
- I might get jumped on for this but the FA and League Cup are both dead competitions now for the top teams. Champions League and Premier League just take precedence and if the new Club World Cup format takes off, with the money involved in that, it will be as important to be in it as the Champions League. It will be the difference between a team buying and not buying another £60m-£100m player.
- Manchester City are no longer a community association football club, they are a tourist club and a "global brand" who will happily sell their tickets and merchandise to the show to the highest bidder. This will only get worse in my opinion.
He's one of our own.....I dont like that we don't have a proper song for Phil Foden after all the titles and accolades he's won as a local lad. Would really help at a time like now when his morale is low.
That's a very fair point tbh. Things do change always have.Reading this thread it seems like most are pissed off at getting old. Football has changed and so have the fans. Most of it for the better.
I did 30 years at Maine Road before we moved to the Etihad. I much prefer it now.
Reading this thread it seems like most are pissed off at getting old. Football has changed and so have the fans. Most of it for the better.
I did 30 years at Maine Road before we moved to the Etihad. I much prefer it now.
The terrace went in 1993 and Maine Road was never the sameThat's a very fair point tbh. Things do change always have.
But...as spectator, I will always prefer kippax terrace Maine rd to anything thst came after it.
And yes I'm a grumpy ,older fan! Lol.
If you read "The Soccer Tribe" by Desmond Morris,there is a sub- chapter namedIt used to be a simple game, I was given a short book when I was 8 years old which explained the official rules of Association Football. I knew it by heart by the time I was 9. It used to be a judgement call by the ref and the linesmen between them, sometimes the ref was called over if the linesman felt he had made a mistake. If players disagreed they might have been told to grow up or get booked, and sometimes sent off for dangerous play. There were no cards, the referee’s judgement, however flawed, was final. These days you might as well have a panel of AI judges giving marks out of ten for everything that happens on the pitch. The constant tinkering with rules just encourages gamesmanship and time wasting. in the 60s and 70s I never once saw a defender getting away with wrestling an attacker in the penalty area, nor did I ever see an attacker throwing a goalkeeper to the ground and not being penalised. Shirt pulling was always a foul. Too many rules, too hard to keep up with them, and too much inconsistency in applying them. It used to be fun watching the mud bath games in the 70s.
Today the players are fitter, the top clubs are able to maintain superb playing conditions and the facilities for fans are much better than 50 years ago. I am not complaining about being old, but the TV revenues have changed the game and foreign managers and players, however talented, just mean that talented UK youth tend to gravitate to the lower divisions.
Not sure which is better, bit as a City fan the last few years have been fun
I thought the game had laws rather than rules.If you read "The Soccer Tribe" by Desmond Morris,there is a sub- chapter named
The seventeen rules of the game.
It was a game that was invented by public schoolboys and they wanted it to be as simple as possible,
so that everybody could join in and know what was going on/ how to play it.
Now ,the administrators of " the beautiful game" seem to change the rules every month, the changes to the
handball rules and offside rules are particularly over complicated and are wide open to interpretation and thus open to manipulation.
I thought the game had laws rather than rules.
Good post. I too was given an FA football book when 8 or 9 years old and although I didn't study them like you did, I had a pretty good understanding of the rules of the game at that time.That " understanding ' has simply crumbled over the years.....and reached a ,for me,pinnacle when I watched Anthony Taylor listen to his ear piece in that game against Chelsea at home,and changed his mind over an obvious red card ....due to the influence of stockley park adjudicators.It used to be a simple game, I was given a short book when I was 8 years old which explained the official rules of Association Football. I knew it by heart by the time I was 9. It used to be a judgement call by the ref and the linesmen between them, sometimes the ref was called over if the linesman felt he had made a mistake. If players disagreed they might have been told to grow up or get booked, and sometimes sent off for dangerous play. There were no cards, the referee’s judgement, however flawed, was final. These days you might as well have a panel of AI judges giving marks out of ten for everything that happens on the pitch. The constant tinkering with rules just encourages gamesmanship and time wasting. in the 60s and 70s I never once saw a defender getting away with wrestling an attacker in the penalty area, nor did I ever see an attacker throwing a goalkeeper to the ground and not being penalised. Shirt pulling was always a foul. Too many rules, too hard to keep up with them, and too much inconsistency in applying them. It used to be fun watching the mud bath games in the 70s.
Today the players are fitter, the top clubs are able to maintain superb playing conditions and the facilities for fans are much better than 50 years ago. I am not complaining about being old, but the TV revenues have changed the game and foreign managers and players, however talented, just mean that talented UK youth tend to gravitate to the lower divisions.
Not sure which is better, bit as a City fan the last few years have been fun
Thats a lazy one that. They all sing that. The least we could do is come up with a new song that's decent. I know there is the bruxe Springsteen one but it's been robbed by England before we got it going. Now we don't sing it because of that.He's one of our own.....