of course not ,, point i'm trying to make is this achievement was nearly ignored due to the fact they were a scottish team ... or sorry a british team when doing well by media / t.v etc :ball:
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when celtic won european cup they were classed as the first british team to win it .. :confused: untill utd won it and suddenly a english team won it . and celtics achievement was quickly forgoten about :ball:
when it suits media / t.v even now irish teams / scottish / welsh / players / golfers etc still get called british when they win something but revert back to thier own nationalitys when beaten ...
so the british press / t.v / media are fairly regular in making false claims. :ball:
I read somewhere (already mentioned here) that it was sung at one of the Manchester United games at Old Trafford shortly after the Munich Air Disaster in 1958.
Edit:
Here ya go: http://www.manchestereveningnews.co...._our_song.html
Not sure whether to believe this 61 year old though...
Besides Mrs. Crazy-eyed-woman from Manchester claim, there seems to be no other evidence of this account. Even someone who used the account in a book had to admit as much.
Anyway my Grandad sang it in the '30s in Kilcohen, ever before the musical was penned, and the whole crowd joined in, miraculously knowing the words of the yet-to-be-written song. I have no other evidence to back this up, but I will be shortly writing a wiki page on the matter, and writing a strongly worded letter to the now defunct Waterford People, clearing up, once and for all, the origins of the terrace song.
I will also mention in the letter the fact that the British media gloss over Waterford United when they mention Celtic as the first British winners of the European Cup just because they're not British and they've never won it.
Also, the colour blue didn't exist until Waterford United invented it.
That should clear all matters up.
Sorry, I just want to clear this up - are Celtic Scottish, Irish, English or British or some or all of the above? And if so, why are they so bigotted against the Welsh.
I can also confirm that Waterford fans invented 1960s nostalgia.
This may be in danger of getting a bit off-topic lads;)
:D
What version of Molly Malone were Chelsea fans singing at their game against Stoke yesterday?
Think it's the one where her wheelbarrow is full of celery.
There was no such thing as singing on the terraces in the 1940's, a completely different era. At least do your homework before you post ;)
Secondly, the original version of YNWA from the rodgers & hammerstein musical is not even related to the one Gerry & the pacemakers sang, completely different altogether. It's like comparing a dance music version of a rock song. No football fans ever sang the rodgers & hammerstein version on the terraces, as (a) it wasn't a football orientated or suitablly composed song to sing and (b) their sexuality would've been seriously questioned!
The singing on the terraces didn't happen until the swinging sixties and it started with pop/chart songs. It was most prominent at Anfield and initially began during the half-time interval when the announcer/dj played those songs. YNWA was one of these. It later evolved to being sung during the game. Liverpool sang it first, but unlike all other chart songs of the time, they continued to sing YNWA after it had exited the charts and the dj stopped playing it. Thus they adopted it as their own and it was a firm favourite as Gerry and the Pacemakers were a local band. Liverpool adopted it, everyone else followed. The Man Utd rumour is just that and a wind up myth used by Utd fans. There is not one shred of evidence to support YNWA being sung pre Gerry and the Pacemakers or pre Liverpool. The Celtic link is also false as pre Hillsborough YNWA was not sung on the terraces by Celtic fans. Show me pre-hillsborough footage of them doing so and i'll eat my own shorts....
Probably - to the tune of Que Sera Sera
'When I was just a little boy I asked my mother what should I be
Should I be Chelsea, should I be Leeds heres what she said to me,
wash out your mouth my son, and go get your fathers gun and shoot the chelsea scum, shoot the chelsea scum'
Leeds wasted millions before the big club did :p
First time I heard singing at a match in Ireland was the first match I ever attended with my old man (I was 7). Rovers v Waterford 1969. Loads of Skinheads at the game. We shall not be moved was belted out by the Rovers fans.
pity ya did not say man utd
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yH3LJ8TFbdM