LamieRobertson
Not awoke
Do they want a two goal start again….oh hang on they still lost
Well you are very posh.
The outside:Right, outside
They weren't "officially" called "Champions of all England".What some folk don't realise, including all Palace fans, is that Brighton do indeed have a major title.
Back in 1910, Albion won the Charity Shield. At the time it was played between the Football League winners (mostly Midlands and Northern) and the Southern League winners. The team that won were officially crowned 'Champions of all England'. Albion defeated Aston Villa 1-0.
So when Leicester City fans sung at us 'Champions of England, you'll never sing that' it was a case of 'Well....'
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The wiki page uses the champions reference and seems to refer to Tim Carder's book. I thought I saw some kind of poster/programme/card from the time with it in print too.They weren't "officially" called "Champions of all England".
As far as I can tell it's an idea that is only ever mentioned in relation to the time we won it, not the other four or five times that format was used. Also it was played in front of about 13,000 people on a Monday, which doesn't exactly scream "major sporting event".
The most confusing part of all this though, is trying to work out what motivated somebody to rename Aston Villa "Aston Fries" on the match's Wikipedia page:
View attachment 202449
Which reminds me of the time somebody randomly added something like "Mr Gaylord" to Graham Thorpe's page as his nickname.
As far as I remember, it's something that was originally written half seriously in one of the match reports, along the lines of Scotland's claim to be world champions after beating England in 1967.The wiki page uses the champions reference and seems to refer to Tim Carder's book. I thought I saw some kind of poster/programme/card from the time with it in print too.
Who knew ?Bringing us gently back to the OP's question....
Yes. Yes I am.
I'm not sure Leicester fans sing that. Think it is "you made us sing that" about their chairman who died.What some folk don't realise, including all Palace fans, is that Brighton do indeed have a major title.
Back in 1910, Albion won the Charity Shield. At the time it was played between the Football League winners (mostly Midlands and Northern) and the Southern League winners. The team that won were officially crowned 'Champions of all England'. Albion defeated Aston Villa 1-0.
So when Leicester City fans sung at us 'Champions of England, you'll never sing that' it was a case of 'Well....'
View attachment 202446
I went to a dodgy fried chicken outlet the other day that still does Aston FriesThey weren't "officially" called "Champions of all England".
As far as I can tell it's an idea that is only ever mentioned in relation to the time we won it, not the other four or five times that format was used. Also it was played in front of about 13,000 people on a Monday, which doesn't exactly scream "major sporting event".
The most confusing part of all this though, is trying to work out what motivated somebody to rename Aston Villa "Aston Fries" on the match's Wikipedia page:
View attachment 202449
Which reminds me of the time somebody randomly added something like "Mr Gaylord" to Graham Thorpe's page as his nickname.