Return of the Rev
Well-known member
I thought Bradford were playing elsewhere?
not on a sunday A bit like God i have set Sundays aside as a special day
I thought Bradford were playing elsewhere?
get inPalace do seem to be finally learning what true football fans really want though. I mean: I've not heard that embarrassing goal music once this season.
Well, not according to that other media powerhouse, the Newcastle Chronicle "From the very first minute until the last, the only real sound you could hear with the Amex was that of the travelling Toon Army, who were as vocal, jovial and supportive as ever - packing out an entire end of the ground".
Yep, looking forward to it at the end of the year. Incidentally, do you still stick us up in the heavens or where do you put the away fans now with the new ruling?
'Selective deafness' at it's finest.
Yep. It sure was.Likewise
Some little Palace fan tweeted yesterday something along the lines of "Have loads of Brighton fans come dressed as blue seats". One of the poorest attempts at trolling I've seen, even for one of them.
Or maybe he really was that stupid, as the tweet was posted about thirty seconds before half time....
Also mocked the atmosphere. In contrast to Selhurst, where the atmosphere is no doubt out of this world currently
Away days are great if you've never been there before, it's a cathedral of a stadium and/or the place is a good night out. That's why I Championship so much fun.
Swansea ticks none of those for me. Identikit plastic stadium, parochial town filled with wannabe hardmen and horrific lasses, hours away from civilisation on the train. (It's quicker, and takes fewer trains to get from Newcastle to Paris than it does to get to Swansea.)
Same criticisms for Burnley, Stoke, Middlesbrough, Sunderland and so on.
We might be miles away from everyone, but by Christ we've an impressive stadium and a brilliant night out.
This was when I think 'we' (all 19,000 of us) took ownership of the AMEX.
My haven't times changed.
St James Park is the loudest stadium I've ever been to, although that was before they rebuilt and took the roof line higher. And Newcastle is a city that should be on absolutely everyone's bucket list.
Totally agree about Swansea and Burnley. The gene pool seems very shallow in Burnley.
[emoji23][emoji23][emoji23][emoji23][emoji23][emoji23]Palace do seem to be finally learning what true football fans really want though. I mean: I've not heard that embarrassing goal music once this season.
Pretty impressive given the distance and the time. Sky have been shocking to us this season, away trips to yourselves, Swansea and Southampton moved to Sundays, just for tv audiences.
Was roughly 50:50 Newcastle and Brighton fans at Newhaven Town station - certainly something I've never seen before.
I went to Newcastle for the first time last season. Result (and performance) aside, I loved it. OK, the away fans' location approximately 4000ft above sea level isn't the best, but as a city, it's a great match day experience. A proper football town. Most clubs these days either play in new stadia located on the edge of town (like us) or in the middle of industrial estates or retail parks, or are in bigger cities with more than one team and thus divided loyalties. When I got to Newcastle last season I was really struck by the city centre buzz surrounding the game. The ground towers over the city like a great cathedral, and because it's pretty central (unlike, say, Anfield, or Old Trafford), there are football fans wandering around everywhere in their shirts. And there are loads of great pubs nearby. I can't think of another place I've been to that has that sort of match day buzz around. If I can, I'll definitely go back this season (and hopefully not drive this time).
Can't quite agree on the atmosphere front inside the stadium- though perhaps given The Fish's post about not being able to hear away fans due to their position, perhaps the same is true in reverse: that you can't hear the Gallowgate end from up there.
Either way, if you've not been previously: go. It ticks a lot of match day experience boxes.
Was roughly 50:50 Newcastle and Brighton fans at Newhaven Town station - certainly something I've never seen before.
I know six people who support Newcastle - only two of them are from there. The other four are all southerners. The one kid at school who supported Newcastle was a Brightonian. Fair play though: you can't accuse them of being glory hunters
I went to Newcastle for the first time last season. Result (and performance) aside, I loved it. OK, the away fans' location approximately 4000ft above sea level isn't the best, but as a city, it's a great match day experience. A proper football town. Most clubs these days either play in new stadia located on the edge of town (like us) or in the middle of industrial estates or retail parks, or are in bigger cities with more than one team and thus divided loyalties. When I got to Newcastle last season I was really struck by the city centre buzz surrounding the game. The ground towers over the city like a great cathedral, and because it's pretty central (unlike, say, Anfield, or Old Trafford), there are football fans wandering around everywhere in their shirts. And there are loads of great pubs nearby. I can't think of another place I've been to that has that sort of match day buzz around. If I can, I'll definitely go back this season (and hopefully not drive this time).
Can't quite agree on the atmosphere front inside the stadium- though perhaps given The Fish's post about not being able to hear away fans due to their position, perhaps the same is true in reverse: that you can't hear the Gallowgate end from up there.
Either way, if you've not been previously: go. It ticks a lot of match day experience boxes.