The only thing offensive about Davy's flag was when he stuck 'and 747 travel' between 'K*hoe' and 'says.'Quote:
Originally Posted by davros
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The only thing offensive about Davy's flag was when he stuck 'and 747 travel' between 'K*hoe' and 'says.'Quote:
Originally Posted by davros
Quote:
Originally Posted by Slash/ED
Thank You one of the best posts on this subject.
I started going to Arsenal in 1980, this means that at one point in the early eighties I watched Arsenal with Talbot in midfield and Chapman up front. If anything I was more passionate about them then than I am now with Vieira and Henry in those positions.
Its also about going with your mates, having a laugh and your identity, going new places and seeing new grounds not about the facts and figures about how many accurate passes that Robbie Savage has given, and all that stuff that Sky and crap tabloids bombard us with. Leave that to people who would have looked at you like you were dirt a few years ago when they hated football.
As far as I'm concerned enterenining football is an added and unexpected bonus.
Agree about the fascist elements point. Wonder does he hang his flag at the bridge?!Quote:
Originally Posted by davros
K*hoe himself is an offense!
Great posts there slash and pat o. We're the real fans but the ole ole brigade will never understand that shouting at a tv screen on sunday...........
KOH
They probably would but I think Shels would have given them a game this year if they got them in the UEFA or CL qualifyers. Beyond the top two there's not much difference between the remaining sides and the el sides, imo.Quote:
Originally Posted by davros
I agree with the sentiments of others here, the main crime is those who knock the eL without trying or without realising that their attitude helps perpetuate its significantly lower quality. It must be said though it is not easy to support an eL club. There is next to no TV coverage (it was even more awful before TV3), scant radio coverage and very poor coverage in the newspapers. I work in a newsagents on Sunday and I went through all of the so called Irish tabloids last Sunday to examine eL coverage. I think there was one column on Shels in the Sunday World and 2 pages in the Star on Sunday with a column by Roddy Collins and nothing else in the other papers. No league tables, fixtures or results. To be fair to Shels their European run actually did force some eL coverage in the tabloids briefly, but this is entirely centred on them. It's a chicken and egg situation. How can we get people to go to games without media coverage and how can we get the media to cover the league without good attendences and quality?
Shelbourne for one brief moment against Deportivo harnessed the potential of the league and managed to get over 20,000 fans to come to a single game involving an Irish club. Imagine how many people would be bothered with the league if every Irish tabloid backpage headline was about the eL? By burying the eL deep away from the back page it sends a message of inferiority out about the league. Our media must shoulder heavily the responsibility for the preference of Irish to choose the English game over our own. We saturate our back pages with columns and columns about the EPL, we dedicate a weekly highlights programme to the EPL on RTÉ of a far higher quality than our own weekly eL magazine on TV3. Whether it is right or wrong it makes business sense for the media to do so as they have created the sheer interest they cannot turn their backs on. The only possible solution is for our representatives in Europe next week to 'do a Shelbourne' in unison and progress through several rounds in European competition. I am aware Cork did this last year in the Inter Toto but sadly even their exploits were given pretty poor media coverage.