Tricolour was brought out at Highbury at the few times I saw them in the early eighties. But then Arsenal did have seven Irish players in or about the first team. :p And it was either the locals or certain Arsenal fans that defaced the wanted poster for a Provo that escaped in 1980 (forgotten his name but the poster had two photos - one clean shaven, other with blanket style beard) with republican slogans as you queued to get into the East Stand. Interesting that Charlie Sargent was a Gooner, but spent most of his time at Chelsea. Gooners I know claim he was threatened long ago although this was probably for his shoulder -rubbing with the 'hunters than his far-right politics.Quote:
Originally Posted by Duncan Gardner
BTW, muchas gracias for your text of congratulations on Wednesday night. :D
This is also revisionist claptrap. :p Arsenal are an English club, period! The fact that a fair few people of Irish descent - many who think they're as English as bad railways - does not make it Irish. My last visit to a league game in October 1981 enlightened me to this. Arsenal were playing Man Ure and I was in the North Bank listening to Frank Stapleton getting a load of abuse, much of it anti-Irish. So you can come up with HB, Con and a few others that are Gooners and Irish. What about Jerry, that old boy who hangs around with him, PC, Homer and Tony Boloney?Quote:
Originally Posted by davros
Most clubs have far -right supporters. The difference is that at some - principally Man Ure - they are small, keep a low profile or f*ck off and support someone whose more accomodating of their politics. After all Leeds have a reputation for racist fans but that hasn't stopped you following them. Nor do I think that Chelsea's far right links are a mirage. But I do think that this is confined to a minority, albeit one quite powerfull to attack an editor of a Chelsea fanzine in Prague, almost killing him, and get away with it. It may be the case that with Roman the Jew in charge, there are even less of them now.