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SEMerc
Sunday, August 15, 2010 7:38:36 PM





LMAO!!!  I'll bet he does. Does he honestly think anyone takes him seriously?


Merc, did you go to Spurs yesterday? I see you were posting on here. I also post on here from my iPhone on occassions when I've been at The Gate. Wondering how many games you go to a season, how much you spend on it and whether there's at least a bit of you that begrudges the way Sky has priced many true fans out of their favourite sport


SEMerc wrote:


The answer is no, I didn't. Yes Sky charge too much, although ironically for anyone interested in watching as many PL games as possible the cost has gone up because they broke the BSkyB monopoly by allowing Setanta/ESPN to muscle in.


However, I used to be a regular visitor at Arsenal because:


1- Arsenal nearly always lost when I went.


2- A mate of mine, who has good contacts there, had 'forgotten' to tell the authorities that his uncle - a season ticket holder - had died some years before - hence he could jump the queue and use the season ticket.


I could, if I wished, not have Sky and watch every game online - all perfectly illegal of course.


Matty H wrote:


I actually meant priced out in terms of tickets rather than on tv. The amount of money ploughed into the game has encouraged irresponsible spending which, in turn, has caused massively above inflation ticket prices.


Was that why you weren't at the game yesterday? Must have hurt not being at the first game os the season. I think I'd move heaven and earth to avoid that, so is it money? How many times do you actually go and watch them each season?


Not a dig, just genuinely wondered whilst we're talking about fan loyalty and how it's tough to balance that out with the actual cost of going


SEMerc wrote:


I don't go. It's not the pricing of tickets that ensures I don't, but the availability of tickets - unless of course I sneaked into the away end.


It's difficult getting tickets due to the demand. WHL needs to be expanded but Harringay Council has all of a sudden thrown a couple of hurdles in the way, such as adequate transport links to and from any expanded stadium. Unlike other clubs I could mention, Tottenham Hotspur is run like a proper business. The council, at the very least, should be grateful the club wishes to stay where it is.


BTW, I take on board that clubs in the lower leagues should be given more PL money - except Leeds of course because they evidently wouldn't want it

Super Cell
Sunday, August 15, 2010 7:55:21 PM

Did you ever go? Regularly? Ever travelled away on a regular basis?


40 years is a long time 'not to go'. Amazing how you see so many 25 years olds at WHL.


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
SEMerc
Sunday, August 15, 2010 7:56:14 PM


Did you ever go? Regularly? Ever travelled away on a regular basis?


40 years is a long time 'not to go'. Amazing how you see so many 25 years olds at WHL.


Super Cell wrote:


Yes and yes. But a long time ago.

Super Cell
Sunday, August 15, 2010 8:03:22 PM


Whatever !!! Pity i am not in the premier wannabes club then i could get away and post the pathetic drivel thats been spouted today.... oh well no point in continuing posting in this thread anymore i mean after all i am a fan of the premier league.. best off i post in the championship thread for sunday league pub teams that would make sense !!


Cheers


future_is_orange wrote:


Errr, sorry, but IIRC you were one of those who fanned the flames originally. I have no problems with Premier League fans at all, but it would be nice if they could see that harm that the project has done to the national team and the lower leagues.


The comment about Sunday Pub teams. Face to face would you expect to get away with that? DO you believe it, or are you just having a hissy fit?


This kitchen isn't even luke warm. It's a taste of what happens on football forums as opposed to cosy little back scratching threads which don't really sit well on TWO. Watch the Man U & Liverpool fans go at in here (which is one of the few times it gets 'real') when the time is right. It's brilliant!


Grow some eh? We can take it, but equally we give it back


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
Super Cell
Sunday, August 15, 2010 8:04:06 PM



Did you ever go? Regularly? Ever travelled away on a regular basis?


40 years is a long time 'not to go'. Amazing how you see so many 25 years olds at WHL.


SEMerc wrote:


Yes and yes. But a long time ago.


Super Cell wrote:


If there was no SKY would you go now?


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
SEMerc
Sunday, August 15, 2010 8:10:32 PM




Did you ever go? Regularly? Ever travelled away on a regular basis?


40 years is a long time 'not to go'. Amazing how you see so many 25 years olds at WHL.


Super Cell wrote:


Yes and yes. But a long time ago.


SEMerc wrote:


If there was no SKY would you go now?


Super Cell wrote:


My going would be governed by ticket availability, as I've previously stated. I don't actually need to have Sky to watch Spurs. I have Sky because I watch other sports.

Super Cell
Sunday, August 15, 2010 8:12:12 PM

Ahh, but if it wasn't for the SKY contract then there would be no streaming.


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
SEMerc
Sunday, August 15, 2010 8:13:20 PM


Ahh, but if it wasn't for the SKY contract then there would be no streaming.


Super Cell wrote:


That's not true actually.

Matty H
  • Matty H
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
Sunday, August 15, 2010 8:14:34 PM


Ahh, but if it wasn't for the SKY contract then there would be no streaming.


SEMerc wrote:


Well that's not true actually.

Super Cell wrote:


Technically it is true. The foreign channels get their pictures from Sky
SEMerc
Sunday, August 15, 2010 8:18:55 PM



Ahh, but if it wasn't for the SKY contract then there would be no streaming.


Matty H wrote:


Well that's not true actually.


SEMerc wrote:

Technically it is true. The foreign channels get their pictures from Sky

Super Cell wrote:


Ah yes, but the PL negotiates separate rights for foreign broadcasters. The fact that Sky transmits or not makes no difference in the general scheme of things. I never watch Sky or Fox streams.

Saint Snow
Sunday, August 15, 2010 11:19:47 PM

LOL! at this thread.



 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Saint Snow
Monday, August 16, 2010 10:34:03 AM

Unfortunately for O'Neill he will be remembered more for his duff purchases (Reo-Coker and Harewood)

SEMerc wrote:


Perhaps O'Neil just didn't know how to get the best out of him, unlike Ian Holloway


 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Super Cell
Monday, August 16, 2010 4:09:42 PM


LOL! at this thread.



 


Saint Snow wrote:


Exactly


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
Saint Snow
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 8:37:26 AM

Returning to the hot potato of the merits of the Premier League, I do tend to agree with the conclusion that the Premier League has, overall, had a negative effect on football in England.


However, the problem is that it's still the pinnacle league in England. And any sports team (or sportsman/woman) will try to achieve the highest progress they can. That's why they exist, and competitiveness is part of the human psyche. I don't doubt that Simon & Matthew speak honestly about their thoughts on their teams being promoted to the Premier League. And yet, apart from the financial aspect of being in the Prem, I think it likely that a not inconsiderable part of them would be jubillant at any promotion - simply because they've reached the top division, scaled the highest peak.


Just look at Blackpool fans. They know they've next to no chance of staying up but, like Burnley fans before them, will just enjoy the bigtime whilst it lasts, rubbing shoulders with the world-renowned clubs and seeing some of the best players in the world come to Bloomfield Road. You tell them that the Premier League is soulless and worse than the Championship. Ask them in which division they'd prefer to live life in.


 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
SEMerc
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 9:18:07 AM
Saint Snow
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 10:29:18 AM

Juventus apparently on the verge of signing Jermaine Jenas on loan, with a view to a £10m switch. But AC Milan, Sampdoria and Galatasaray are all reported to be keen to sign him.



 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
SEMerc
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 10:30:47 AM


Juventus apparently on the verge of signing Jermaine Jenas on loan, with a view to a £10m switch. But AC Milan, Sampdoria and Galatasaray are all reported to be keen to sign him.



 


Saint Snow wrote:


I laughed at that one too. Getting GBP10m for 'JJ' would be a bloody good result. I can but hope.


Apart from tonight's game the other event I'll be keeping my eye on is Sevilla's match on Wednesday night and whether Fabiano plays.

Super Cell
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 12:32:27 PM


Returning to the hot potato of the merits of the Premier League, I do tend to agree with the conclusion that the Premier League has, overall, had a negative effect on football in England.


However, the problem is that it's still the pinnacle league in England. And any sports team (or sportsman/woman) will try to achieve the highest progress they can. That's why they exist, and competitiveness is part of the human psyche. I don't doubt that Simon & Matthew speak honestly about their thoughts on their teams being promoted to the Premier League. And yet, apart from the financial aspect of being in the Prem, I think it likely that a not inconsiderable part of them would be jubillant at any promotion - simply because they've reached the top division, scaled the highest peak.


Just look at Blackpool fans. They know they've next to no chance of staying up but, like Burnley fans before them, will just enjoy the bigtime whilst it lasts, rubbing shoulders with the world-renowned clubs and seeing some of the best players in the world come to Bloomfield Road. You tell them that the Premier League is soulless and worse than the Championship. Ask them in which division they'd prefer to live life in.


 


Saint Snow wrote:


A fair analysis.


They say it is often better to travel hopefully than to actually arrive. That's what the Premier League is to me. It's something we have to aspire to because there is nothing else. It would signify the resurrection of a club which has, as is still said every time we're on TV, fallen from the Champions League semi-final to being 15 points adrift at the bottom of League One in just a few years. We've taken a fair bit of stick over those years, quite deservedly, but none of it was the fans' fault. Indeed all we did was provide teams with their big pay-days and ensured that League One continually boasted massive attendance figures relative to its status as 1,750,000 fans came through the turnstiles at Elland Road in our three year stay.


But promotion would be bitter sweet. Our realistic aspiration would be upper mid table after, say, five years. For a club with the heritage we have (after all we won the league more recently than Liverpool and were regularly in Europe in the 90s) that is a soulless and depressing thought. And for the privilege we would have to pay massive prices and have our kick offs shunted around left right and centre.


I would be jubilant at promotion, yes. But it isn't that long ago we were playing in the Premier League, and some still view it as their right (conveniently forgetting about the 80s wasteland that afflicted the club). We didn't travel to Old Trafford as day trippers. Those 9,000 fans weren't there to enjoy the day. They were there to snarl at the rest of the football world. When I went to Spurs there was no awe. It was the type of ground I have been used to watching Leeds in. In short promotion to the PL would simply be business as usual after the novelty had worn off. Except the world has moved on since 2002. Not even a club of our size can catch up - look at Villa and Everton as examples.


Blackpool, on the other hand, well to them it IS all new. Of course it meant a lot because in modern times they have no history. Generations have been and gone since it was a normal sight at Bloomfield Road for the top talent to turn up for them. I bet relegation, if it happens, will actually hurt them far more than they might admit.


Which grounds in the Premier League WOULDN'T I be excited about visiting? Ones where I can think of better in the Championship?


Blackpool, Wolves, Blackburn, Birmingham, Sunderland, Bolton, Fulham, Stoke, Wigan, West Brom.


This isn't meant to sound arrogant, just honest. I'm not sure I could stomach paying £50 to watch Leeds v Fulham on a Tuesday evening for the privilege of being ten points outside the Europa League place. What IS the point of that existence?


 


 


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
Super Cell
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 1:10:35 PM

I might also add that once upon a time the 'top' league was an interesting place to be. Players who you only read about in the papers or saw on Match of The Day fleetingly now fill the front & back pages. There are programmes galore out there, supplements everywhere. The internet.


There is no mystery about the Premier League any more. It's piped into my front room, like it or not, to the point where I feel like I know the players and managers.


There is no WOW factor to seeing someone like Rooney because they're always there, in yer face. Blanket exposure, over-exposure. The rarity factor has gone out of the game.


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
SEMerc
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 1:26:42 PM

Probably one of the better headlines in recent years.


http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=337901&cc=5739


 


 


 


 


 


Not football related - not a bad headline either


Saint Snow
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 2:25:52 PM

I don't disagree with anything you say.


I've never been that involved with going to watch live football games. My team is Liverpool and they've always been in the top division in my lifetime, but I must have been to Anfield probably only about two dozen times in my life.


Then again, I've always preferred going to see Rugby League live, having a season ticket for several years at Saints as a teenager/young bloke. If you want a contrast to Premier League football, try going to Knowsley Road! I actually did last Friday - the first time in about 3 years. I wanted to visit one last time to say my goodbyes before it's bulldozed at the end of the season, and took my 6 year old daughter. I don't mind saying I had a tear in my eye as I clapped the players off the pitch for the last time there - so many memories of the place.



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Super Cell
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 4:58:07 PM

Saints fans are the Millwall/Cardiff of RL. They always have to turn down the effects micropohones at Knowsley Road because of the profanity that gushes forth. For RL that's pretty rare.


I used to go to Headingley, but the prices went up to the point that for some games it's cheaper to go to Elland Road - which is saying something! They also play on Friday nights, and that's no night to be rushing home after a long week and struggling through the labyrinth of streets to try and find a parking space.


 


Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
Super Cell
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 5:06:04 PM

Although strictly a Championship piece of news this sums up the effect of television on the modern game:


http://www.leedsunited.com/news/20100817/fa-statement-on-forest-game_2247585_2125730


It wasn't WW3, as Matty will no doubt tell you. And it wouldn't have happened if the referee had got a grip of the situation in the first place. But most importantly it probably wouldn't have happened if TV hadn't been there. The FA 'had' to take action because it was.


I am not sure how they can charge Gunter as he was given a yellow card. Mind you they did that to Jermaine Beckford a couple of years ago. Booked for a clash with the keeper including an elbow, but when the TV highlighted it the ref lied and said that the yellow was for something else when we all knew exactly what it was for.


Everything under the microscope, blown out of proportion.


EDIT: In the regulations it now says:


In all cases charges will be issued within three working days of an incident, or media comments coming to The FA’s attention.


So TV really does become like a fifth official.

http://www.thefa.com/TheFA/Disciplinary/NewsAndFeatures/2010/FastTrackBriefing_090810



Farnley/Pudsey Leeds
40m asl
Matty H
  • Matty H
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 7:18:35 PM
I think, somehow, in some sort of micro climate-type way, this thread sums up the effect the Prem and it's prices and exposure that at least two of the most prolific posters in this thread don't actually even support their teams. That's not a dig, just an observation 😄
Saint Snow
Tuesday, August 17, 2010 8:08:09 PM


Saints fans are the Millwall/Cardiff of RL. They always have to turn down the effects micropohones at Knowsley Road because of the profanity that gushes forth.

Super Cell wrote:


LOL. I don't know if you're pulling my leg here, but Saints never used to be any worse in terms of effanjeffin. In terms of out and out thuggishness, the worst clubs were/are the two Hulls and Warrington.


At the game last Friday, it did strike me that there was very little in terms of singing/chanting full stop.


 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan

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