pissedagain
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 5 Sep 2008
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when that report was done OT had a 75,000 capacity whilst we had 32,000 capacity
de niro said:i ask every rag i meet the same question.
"have you ever considered going to a game?"
*whistles"
BlueAnorak said:There are 2 splits in Manchester support, by Geography & Forebears Religion..
Geographically:
Central, East, South Manchester are mostly blue North Manchester mostly Red.
Further Out: Rochdale Mostly Red, Oldham 50/50, Tameside & Stockport - Mostly Blue, Trafford & Salford - Mostly Red
Bolton - Mainly Red (Blues 3rd) Bury 50/50 (Prestwich & Whitefield Mainly Blue - rest Mainly Red.
Forebears Religion:
Though not as dramatic a divide as elsewhere in the country there is a heafty divide into the club followed. Historically the following loyalties existed:
Jewish - Mainly Blue.
Chapel (Methodist/Baptist/Congregational) - Mainly Blue.
CofE - Mainly Blue
Catholic - Overwhelmingly Red.
All of which were diluted by "Glory Seeking" - Utds very poor performance between the wars (when football became the national sport), The sympathy for Utd generated by the Munich Air Crash in the late 50's and Utd's total dominance of the Premier League between 1992-2008
coleridge said:BlueAnorak said:There are 2 splits in Manchester support, by Geography & Forebears Religion..
Geographically:
Central, East, South Manchester are mostly blue North Manchester mostly Red.
Further Out: Rochdale Mostly Red, Oldham 50/50, Tameside & Stockport - Mostly Blue, Trafford & Salford - Mostly Red
Bolton - Mainly Red (Blues 3rd) Bury 50/50 (Prestwich & Whitefield Mainly Blue - rest Mainly Red.
Forebears Religion:
Though not as dramatic a divide as elsewhere in the country there is a heafty divide into the club followed. Historically the following loyalties existed:
Jewish - Mainly Blue.
Chapel (Methodist/Baptist/Congregational) - Mainly Blue.
CofE - Mainly Blue
Catholic - Overwhelmingly Red.
All of which were diluted by "Glory Seeking" - Utds very poor performance between the wars (when football became the national sport), The sympathy for Utd generated by the Munich Air Crash in the late 50's and Utd's total dominance of the Premier League between 1992-2008
A decent summary.
Discussing religion is rather 'Cellar-like' but it is relevant in this thread.
More recent immigrants/religions tend to all into the category of your last paragraph. We might not like it but you can understand their logic. My immigrant father was the same but, in fairness to him, he has been going to a few matches at OT every season since the 1960s. My maternal great grandfather was West Country Baptist [Chapel] and so blue from before WWII. Anyway, enough Christmas catharsis for one year. ;)
SPIDERBOY said:They ain't in manchester.
Depends on which side of the Airport.Ruddles81 said:Growing up in Timperley and going to secondary school in Altrincham, in my class of 30 lads there were maybe 2-3 City fans. This was in the mid-late 90s when they were at their height and we were at our nadir. I'd agree totally with the match going thing, go into most pubs in Altrincham when the rags are on and it's packed, if were playing you can pick your seat. I'd say though Timperley-Alty-Hale is very much a red area.
Speaking to my missus nephew whose 15 and goes to St Ambrose in Hale Barns, apparently there's a lot of Blues in his class now. I'd be interested to know how the balance of power is shifting in the schools now with blue vs red. I think fundamentally south Mcr heading into Cheshire will always be more of a red area.
bitterblue said:Prestwich & Whitefield is an Oasis of blues in a desert of rags on that map