pmcg76 said:
Gooner is an excellent poster on cycling matter's and I have great respect for him in general. On football though he is just another typical Irish glory hunter supporter. He will deny this of course but if you live in Ireland, you will support one of United, Arsenal, Liverpool or more recently Chelsea and we will now see City fan's popping up. They will always try to justify why they support these club's but it's obvious really.
It's not like being born into these club's, well maybe it is but that is because whoever came before was a glory hunter as well, older brother/parent etc. It's not like having a bond or connection with the city or town the team come's from like most fans in England. Not to say there aren't plenty of English glory hunter's, most support Utd as usual.
My father and uncles were all Leeds fans. No Arsenal allegiance among family or friends whatsoever. In the case of my father he was also huge Cork Celtic fan when they were in existence and travelled many parts of the country watching them.
They are all the same as well, they expect their team to win becasue they chose to support a winning team and moan all the time when they are not winning. Don't expect them to understand what it's like to follow a club that would dream of Arsenal's status/success cos they would never even consider following such a team.
I follow a non-premier team because I lived in the city they come from for quite a few year's. When you talk to the glory fan's, it's always the same. WTF would you support them for?? No concept of supporting a club for more than the glory of winning things. It is funny to see how obsessed some Irish poeope become with football team's from cities they don't have the first clue about or probably never been to other than for a football game.
That's life in Ireland.
PCMG, I respect your opinion and I have no doubt that you're bang on the money with some of the points above. Here's where you're wrong with regards to me. I follow the Football League programme on the lower divisions without miss every single week. It's either one of the shows that review the action on the BBC or the one on Monday evening with George Gavin on Sky. I have huge respect for these fans in the lower divisions and they are bigger fans of their clubs than me and other Irish fans of the top PL fans. To say I'm dismissive of them couldn't be further from the truth. If that was the case why do I follow this level of football so avidly. In recent weeks I've watched Derby v Leicester, QPR v Leeds, Derby v QPR, all of Gillingham v Wolves on Sky a couple of months back and watched Sheff Utd v Charlton in the Cup. Take Portsmouth where fans have put huge amounts of their money into the club. Massive respect. They couldn't even keep hold of David Connolly who had a good partnership at the start of the season with Agyemang. That's what hard times is.
Secondly, I've been down to Turners Cross to watch Cork City games down the years. I remember even listening on the radio celebrating Paul Bannon's title winning goal back in the day when the league was a 3 way tie. That time it went to play off since no goal difference decided the league back then. The season has just started and I plan on going down on a few occasions this year when I can. I like to see them do well. Last week I watched a good bit of City's game with Derry and the pitch in the Brandywell was a disgrace. Do you think people in this thread would be interested in me posting on the happenings of Cork City's game last Sunday? Last Monday I watched the Soccer Republic show(recommend it, much better than the MNS show from last year) on RTE where Brian Kerr and David Forde were guests for the review of the league. I'll be watching it tomorrow again. Regarding your bolded point I have never in my life said that once to a fan of an Airtricity club. Where I think the Irish clubs leave themselves down is that they don't go into the community enough. I can speak for Cork City here and I take my own experiences growing up in primary and secondary schools and not once would you see club officials or players come into the schools to tap into a future fan base market by promoting the club. Compare that with the GAA local clubs or the Football League clubs in England. They miss out on generations of fans and people find no identity with the clubs as a result. They have only themselves to blame. I've been saying it for years. What could help now is the current TV deal where so far they are showing one game a week. I'd be interested to see if they will keep this up or will this be just a temporary one coinciding with the season start. They are clashing the games with the Premiership which isn't the best scenario and the Friday night football which they showed on a temporary basis before would be better now for the permanent TV fixture.
I disagree with your generalisation even if a lot of it is correct to a certain section. I have no issue with pointing this out and it's a well worth discussion but I think to say I have no respect for fans of the lower leagues, you would have to know me personally. I know safe in the knowledge that isn't the case. Regarding Ebandit's point about relegation, certain clubs are held to higher standard than others. Arsenal and Everton are two of the longest serving clubs in the top flight. That goes in all leagues. Roda, Zwolle, NEC and Go Ahead Eagles aren't held to the same standard of results as Ajax, Feyenoord and PSV. If Ajax go through a lean spell it won't be acceptable to just say they are better than the former set of clubs and that everything is OK because they won't get relegated. I'm entitled to give my opinion on all walks of football as long as I watch it in that referenced league and am informed on the goings on in it. My location has got nothing got to do with it and I make no apologies for my location of birth. My location should have nothing got to do with me having an opinion of the Classico tonight which was a great game. I'm a football fan first and foremost.