Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Emerson Crane Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> The home of football to me is a term of affection

> for the club I love, nothing more nothing less. I

> leave it to others to think whatever they wish of

> that phrase.


If you were going to fall in love, you could have picked a better club. One that wins things. Have you ever thought of changing?

To say Liverpool? Who haven't won the title for.......remind me. Or say, excuse me while I gag, Tottenham who haven't won the title since, well ask Jah, he knows.


But seriously folks, support for a club is uncondtional, and is not dependent on your team winning. I've supported my team through good times and bad and so it will remain. I am not a fairweather supporter, and am not one of those that follows a club only through the good times. Glory hunters I believe they are called, ask anyone thats supported Man U since the early nineties, they'll know what that means. B)

It wasn't meant in a derogatory manner Mockney - or have I totally got the wrong end of the stick here? My Madrid team is Atletico, in fact they're my Spanish team having seen them play and visited the Calderon a few times now. I was quite pleased to see the Galacticos torn apart and made up to see Barca win. Brought back happy memories of their 4-0 drubbing at Anfield only 20 months ago.


Apparently, the majority of last night's team came through their academy.


I'm also flying home from Bucharest via Barcelona on Friday night, so I'm looking forward to a night out there!


Anyhoo, to think that Liverpool beat both of those teams in recent years, goes to show just had bad things have got at Anfield (the real home of football ;-) )

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I'd be tempted to put up some sort of fence  to delineate the area and see what happens. Probably nothing.
    • Poundland have been there just over two years. 
    • Has anybody here bought some land from the council to become part of their garden? There are helpful guidelines on the Southwark website here including a PDF with associated costs, however the "valuation" element has absolutely no guidelines. It could be £500 or £50,000. You will already have spent £1000 on the process before finding out what they will charge you for the land - which would certainly be frustrating if it's not affordable for you. The land in question is a tiny patch immediately attached to the front of my property, approx 4 meters wide x 1 meter long. Would like to put a fence there to separate from the pavement and allow some privacy, keep the bins more tidy. The land is of no value to anybody else and is neglected currently - the council seems to have to stopped maintaining this area between the pavement and the houses on our street.
    • I suppose wind could have blown rubbish out of bins down into the pond. But I also counted three footballs and some smaller balls. Regrettably, there is also what seems to be a large dead carp or waterfowl, hard to tell at distance. I just hope the water quality is okay. I am not clear to what extent the pond is managed.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...