by brendywendy » 12 Apr 2009 11:47
by Rex » 12 Apr 2009 12:02
by chandog » 12 Apr 2009 12:18
URZZZZZZZZchandog my mate is apparantly getting banned for life for using homophobic chants
"If you leave early youre gay" not really homophobic
luckily he was using someones member card who never goes anyway so the club will end up banning someone who doesnt care anymore
on the actual event. i thought it was fairly good. got drunk before hand had a great time - carried on chainting regardless of some dickhead stewards. disappointing that so many people decided that just becuase they were coming round telling us to sit down they saw that as a sign to stop singing as well
Was that the lad that got chucked out just after sheff utd scored?? Didn't seem to do a great deal wrong, mind you he didn't miss much!
by chandog » 12 Apr 2009 12:20
brendywendy Well done to dan etc. Had a great time. To be fair the language wasnt that bad,though it clearly upset at least one lady who asked for her family to be moved, which is regretable. That gay chant is the least offensive song ever, and i challenge anyone to find a gay person it actually offends. And lol at darren campbell with his notebook trying to take my card.
by tomrfcurz » 12 Apr 2009 14:10
URZZZZZZZZchandog my mate is apparantly getting banned for life for using homophobic chants
"If you leave early youre gay" not really homophobic
luckily he was using someones member card who never goes anyway so the club will end up banning someone who doesnt care anymore
on the actual event. i thought it was fairly good. got drunk before hand had a great time - carried on chainting regardless of some dickhead stewards. disappointing that so many people decided that just becuase they were coming round telling us to sit down they saw that as a sign to stop singing as well
Was that the lad that got chucked out just after sheff utd scored?? Didn't seem to do a great deal wrong, mind you he didn't miss much!
by Rev Algenon Stickleback H » 12 Apr 2009 15:18
royalexile Please do not offend anyone next time![]()
LOL at complaints of swearing in proximity to sensitive people.
by Rex » 12 Apr 2009 15:41
by Sarah Star » 12 Apr 2009 16:23
by chandog » 12 Apr 2009 16:34
by Bob Smith » 12 Apr 2009 16:48
by Sarah Star » 12 Apr 2009 16:51
by chandog » 12 Apr 2009 17:02
Bob Smith Don't get me wrong, I've done my time on the Southbank and the East Stand but now I have young kids I choose to shield them from the harsher realities of life. There is a world of difference between hearing "dirty northern b*stards" from across the pitch and having some beered up yoof shouting obscenities at the officials and opposition from immediately behind you.
This was just the wrong place to do it (though I accept there was probably nowhere else to try and was a worthy effort).I pay a fair premium to sit in the Upper West and away from the the more intimidating atmosphere generated by some of our supporters.
I wouldn't dream of going into the East Stand and complaining - that's just the way it is. Perhaps some of you lot should just accept the West Stand for what it is.
by Rex » 12 Apr 2009 17:11
Bob Smith Don't get me wrong, I've done my time on the Southbank and the East Stand but now I have young kids I choose to shield them from the harsher realities of life. There is a world of difference between hearing "dirty northern b*stards" from across the pitch and having some beered up yoof shouting obscenities at the officials and opposition from immediately behind you.
This was just the wrong place to do it (though I accept there was probably nowhere else to try and was a worthy effort).I pay a fair premium to sit in the Upper West and away from the the more intimidating atmosphere generated by some of our supporters.
I wouldn't dream of going into the East Stand and complaining - that's just the way it is. Perhaps some of you lot should just accept the West Stand for what it is.
by chandog » 12 Apr 2009 17:21
by Rex » 12 Apr 2009 17:23
chandog there are two levels of supporting the club
1. buying your ticket and lining the chairmans pocket and enjoying the view/ game without feeling the need to be vocal
2. turning up wanting to have a good time by making some noise and not relying on the teams performance to have a good time
We are just trying to get reading to be more of the second point which if successful will make reading a closer representation of most clubs around the country
by chandog » 12 Apr 2009 17:26
royalexilechandog there are two levels of supporting the club
1. buying your ticket and lining the chairmans pocket and enjoying the view/ game without feeling the need to be vocal
2. turning up wanting to have a good time by making some noise and not relying on the teams performance to have a good time
We are just trying to get reading to be more of the second point which if successful will make reading a closer representation of most clubs around the country
No criticism from this quarter Chandog.
by Sun Tzu » 12 Apr 2009 17:27
royalexilechandog there are two levels of supporting the club
1. buying your ticket and lining the chairmans pocket and enjoying the view/ game without feeling the need to be vocal
2. turning up wanting to have a good time by making some noise and not relying on the teams performance to have a good time
We are just trying to get reading to be more of the second point which if successful will make reading a closer representation of most clubs around the country
No criticism from this quarter Chandog.
by working class hero » 12 Apr 2009 17:43
chandogbrendywendy Well done to dan etc. Had a great time. To be fair the language wasnt that bad,though it clearly upset at least one lady who asked for her family to be moved, which is regretable. That gay chant is the least offensive song ever, and i challenge anyone to find a gay person it actually offends. And lol at darren campbell with his notebook trying to take my card.
lol at the stewards thinking they were right in our small argument afterwards. THEY WERE CLEARLY WRONG
I've got no problem with swearing, and I'd rather be in part of the ground full of people who are happy to let off a bit of steam, but the problem is that the upper west is full of people who probably sit there because they'd rather not be around people who swear all the time. Some people are just unable to accept that their preference isn't the only one that's valid.
by brendywendy » 12 Apr 2009 17:48
royalexile Brendy - you animal.
by brendywendy » 12 Apr 2009 17:51
royalexile Who are these people. It's such a precious attutude towards life.
So it's ok to hear the chants coming across the pitch but never from close by. God the fear factor.
I understand it is an area of the stadium which is lofty in many ways, that the corporates and more 'refined' people sit in this area, but i'm sorry to break it to these people, certain sections of our support actually get involved in the passion and feelings involved in a game which mean so much. The result shattered a few dreams on friday and as such feelings will run high in general.
I understand passion does not mean that supporters have to swear all the time, i understand it can upset parents with young children but that is a risk factor that is built into viewing live football. It's heard in the TV / Radio when watching a match so why should the Mad Stad be a different experience.
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