Fri Oct 31, 2014 7:05 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 7:21 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 7:43 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 8:06 pm
alfie sherwood wrote:Cardiff City was a great old football club. Not in the sense that it ever won much, nor in the sense that it had a particularly huge following, but it was great in plenty of other ways.
In a small country with a rugby obsessed media it was great to feel that you were part of something that felt anti establishment and always pretty edgy. It was great that when the chips were down - as they were for much of its history - the homely underachieving South Wales club could muster almost as many supporters away from home as it could at Ninian Park. What was particularly great though was that no matter how bad things were on the pitch, no matter what factions there were in the fanbase, come match day there was a real unity of purpose. We all wanted Cardiff City to win so much it literally hurt. I swear there were times when a few thousand half pissed Welshman almost physically sucked the ball into the net when a late late goal was desperately needed.
We were in it together.
No boycotters, nobody struggling to identify with a team in the 'wrong' colour, no fans feeling apathetic because a good result might prolong something unwanted, nobody feeling that the experience was a tad diminished.
It was real. It was often shit but it was totally authentic. The Cardiff City experience was one of lots of lows but...oh, bloody hell! the highs were immense! Whether tumbling 30 yards down the terrace when Tony Bird stuck one in over in Liege or evading the grasps of Dai Hunt after a mental scrambled equaliser at some nondescript division 4 ground, watching the bluebirds was a nerve shredding, soup of mentalness.
Truth be told, unlike a lot of other long standing fans, I wasn't unduly troubled by the move to CCS. I was no longer in danger of wading ankle deep in piss everytime I got caught short, nor was I at risk of catching something potentially life threatening by biting into a half time burger. We could still get the new stadium rocking too. The late derby day win over the jacks, the night we clung on against Leicester after Gabors 'rugby' tackle. The play off semi against the same opponents and a fervent January evening versus Palace. All life affirming, spine tingling, special nights.
Of course nothing last forever.
One man had a really terrible idea. A couple of people in a position of influence acted as apologists. Some previously respected fans gave it their seal of approval and attempts at protest were shouted down.
And here we are two and a half years later. A club up to its eyeballs in debt, in a lower league position than they were before the nonsense started and with a fair chunk of the fanbase either totally disconnected from the club or in a state of progressive disconnection. To cap it all, the bluebirds play in colours that are totally alien to the football club.
I'm fully aware that there are still fans who feel the same passion as ever. Fair play to you.
No doubt there'll be lots of people who'll dismiss my ramblings as those of an old sentimentalist but bring it on, as far as I'm concerned we've surrendered something really special here.
What's the answer? How do we get our club back? I just don't know. I do know that there's nothing wrong with red, nothing wrong with dragons but they just don't belong at Cardiff City and neither does Vincent Tan.
Fri Oct 31, 2014 8:46 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 10:37 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 10:44 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 11:02 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 11:12 pm
alfie sherwood wrote:Cardiff City was a great old football club. Not in the sense that it ever won much, nor in the sense that it had a particularly huge following, but it was great in plenty of other ways.
In a small country with a rugby obsessed media it was great to feel that you were part of something that felt anti establishment and always pretty edgy. It was great that when the chips were down - as they were for much of its history - the homely underachieving South Wales club could muster almost as many supporters away from home as it could at Ninian Park. What was particularly great though was that no matter how bad things were on the pitch, no matter what factions there were in the fanbase, come match day there was a real unity of purpose. We all wanted Cardiff City to win so much it literally hurt. I swear there were times when a few thousand half pissed Welshman almost physically sucked the ball into the net when a late late goal was desperately needed.
We were in it together.
No boycotters, nobody struggling to identify with a team in the 'wrong' colour, no fans feeling apathetic because a good result might prolong something unwanted, nobody feeling that the experience was a tad diminished.
It was real. It was often shit but it was totally authentic. The Cardiff City experience was one of lots of lows but...oh, bloody hell! the highs were immense! Whether tumbling 30 yards down the terrace when Tony Bird stuck one in over in Liege or evading the grasps of Dai Hunt after a mental scrambled equaliser at some nondescript division 4 ground, watching the bluebirds was a nerve shredding, soup of mentalness.
Truth be told, unlike a lot of other long standing fans, I wasn't unduly troubled by the move to CCS. I was no longer in danger of wading ankle deep in piss everytime I got caught short, nor was I at risk of catching something potentially life threatening by biting into a half time burger. We could still get the new stadium rocking too. The late derby day win over the jacks, the night we clung on against Leicester after Gabors 'rugby' tackle. The play off semi against the same opponents and a fervent January evening versus Palace. All life affirming, spine tingling, special nights.
Of course nothing last forever.
One man had a really terrible idea. A couple of people in a position of influence acted as apologists. Some previously respected fans gave it their seal of approval and attempts at protest were shouted down.
And here we are two and a half years later. A club up to its eyeballs in debt, in a lower league position than they were before the nonsense started and with a fair chunk of the fanbase either totally disconnected from the club or in a state of progressive disconnection. To cap it all, the bluebirds play in colours that are totally alien to the football club.
I'm fully aware that there are still fans who feel the same passion as ever. Fair play to you.
No doubt there'll be lots of people who'll dismiss my ramblings as those of an old sentimentalist but bring it on, as far as I'm concerned we've surrendered something really special here.
What's the answer? How do we get our club back? I just don't know. I do know that there's nothing wrong with red, nothing wrong with dragons but they just don't belong at Cardiff City and neither does Vincent Tan.
Fri Oct 31, 2014 11:42 pm
Fri Oct 31, 2014 11:43 pm
Sat Nov 01, 2014 12:00 am
alfie sherwood wrote:Cardiff City was a great old football club. Not in the sense that it ever won much, nor in the sense that it had a particularly huge following, but it was great in plenty of other ways.
In a small country with a rugby obsessed media it was great to feel that you were part of something that felt anti establishment and always pretty edgy. It was great that when the chips were down - as they were for much of its history - the homely underachieving South Wales club could muster almost as many supporters away from home as it could at Ninian Park. What was particularly great though was that no matter how bad things were on the pitch, no matter what factions there were in the fanbase, come match day there was a real unity of purpose. We all wanted Cardiff City to win so much it literally hurt. I swear there were times when a few thousand half pissed Welshman almost physically sucked the ball into the net when a late late goal was desperately needed.
We were in it together.
No boycotters, nobody struggling to identify with a team in the 'wrong' colour, no fans feeling apathetic because a good result might prolong something unwanted, nobody feeling that the experience was a tad diminished.
It was real. It was often shit but it was totally authentic. The Cardiff City experience was one of lots of lows but...oh, bloody hell! the highs were immense! Whether tumbling 30 yards down the terrace when Tony Bird stuck one in over in Liege or evading the grasps of Dai Hunt after a mental scrambled equaliser at some nondescript division 4 ground, watching the bluebirds was a nerve shredding, soup of mentalness.
Truth be told, unlike a lot of other long standing fans, I wasn't unduly troubled by the move to CCS. I was no longer in danger of wading ankle deep in piss everytime I got caught short, nor was I at risk of catching something potentially life threatening by biting into a half time burger. We could still get the new stadium rocking too. The late derby day win over the jacks, the night we clung on against Leicester after Gabors 'rugby' tackle. The play off semi against the same opponents and a fervent January evening versus Palace. All life affirming, spine tingling, special nights.
Of course nothing last forever.
One man had a really terrible idea. A couple of people in a position of influence acted as apologists. Some previously respected fans gave it their seal of approval and attempts at protest were shouted down.
And here we are two and a half years later. A club up to its eyeballs in debt, in a lower league position than they were before the nonsense started and with a fair chunk of the fanbase either totally disconnected from the club or in a state of progressive disconnection. To cap it all, the bluebirds play in colours that are totally alien to the football club.
I'm fully aware that there are still fans who feel the same passion as ever. Fair play to you.
No doubt there'll be lots of people who'll dismiss my ramblings as those of an old sentimentalist but bring it on, as far as I'm concerned we've surrendered something really special here.
What's the answer? How do we get our club back? I just don't know. I do know that there's nothing wrong with red, nothing wrong with dragons but they just don't belong at Cardiff City and neither does Vincent Tan.
Sat Nov 01, 2014 12:02 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 7:16 am
C. Rombie-Coat wrote:alfie sherwood wrote:Cardiff City was a great old football club. Not in the sense that it ever won much, nor in the sense that it had a particularly huge following, but it was great in plenty of other ways.
In a small country with a rugby obsessed media it was great to feel that you were part of something that felt anti establishment and always pretty edgy. It was great that when the chips were down - as they were for much of its history - the homely underachieving South Wales club could muster almost as many supporters away from home as it could at Ninian Park. What was particularly great though was that no matter how bad things were on the pitch, no matter what factions there were in the fanbase, come match day there was a real unity of purpose. We all wanted Cardiff City to win so much it literally hurt. I swear there were times when a few thousand half pissed Welshman almost physically sucked the ball into the net when a late late goal was desperately needed.
We were in it together.
No boycotters, nobody struggling to identify with a team in the 'wrong' colour, no fans feeling apathetic because a good result might prolong something unwanted, nobody feeling that the experience was a tad diminished.
It was real. It was often shit but it was totally authentic. The Cardiff City experience was one of lots of lows but...oh, bloody hell! the highs were immense! Whether tumbling 30 yards down the terrace when Tony Bird stuck one in over in Liege or evading the grasps of Dai Hunt after a mental scrambled equaliser at some nondescript division 4 ground, watching the bluebirds was a nerve shredding, soup of mentalness.
Truth be told, unlike a lot of other long standing fans, I wasn't unduly troubled by the move to CCS. I was no longer in danger of wading ankle deep in piss everytime I got caught short, nor was I at risk of catching something potentially life threatening by biting into a half time burger. We could still get the new stadium rocking too. The late derby day win over the jacks, the night we clung on against Leicester after Gabors 'rugby' tackle. The play off semi against the same opponents and a fervent January evening versus Palace. All life affirming, spine tingling, special nights.
Of course nothing last forever.
One man had a really terrible idea. A couple of people in a position of influence acted as apologists. Some previously respected fans gave it their seal of approval and attempts at protest were shouted down.
And here we are two and a half years later. A club up to its eyeballs in debt, in a lower league position than they were before the nonsense started and with a fair chunk of the fanbase either totally disconnected from the club or in a state of progressive disconnection. To cap it all, the bluebirds play in colours that are totally alien to the football club.
I'm fully aware that there are still fans who feel the same passion as ever. Fair play to you.
No doubt there'll be lots of people who'll dismiss my ramblings as those of an old sentimentalist but bring it on, as far as I'm concerned we've surrendered something really special here.
What's the answer? How do we get our club back? I just don't know. I do know that there's nothing wrong with red, nothing wrong with dragons but they just don't belong at Cardiff City and neither does Vincent Tan.
Haven't been here for a while but this heartfelt post is a good one that begs a response from me.
Not going into Tan/save the club/rebrand.
The thing is that football has changed. I used to run transits to northern shitholes and just turn up on the day. Train days out etc but it's all gone and won't come back.
The whole police surveillance thing and ticket controls has taken the majority of the buzz away. No more cheap train tickets. All seater stadium. Ticket prices. - That's nothing to do with Cardiff City that's the Taylor Report/NCIS/Sky etc and you can't blame the Club or the owner for that.
Sat Nov 01, 2014 7:21 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 8:49 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 9:18 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 9:37 am
Quakerman wrote:Like a lot of long term supporters the poster harks back to the 'good old days' but football has moved on, it had to because of Hillsborough.I don't miss those days when it was more about gang violence, you could not take children, fans were treated like animals herded and shepherded to and from the grounds and fenced in.
Now, it has become sanitised, corporate because of the Sky TV money, but it is also a safe environment to take children everyone has a seat, and most stadiums are modern and safe.
As to City we will have to see how this season pans out,I personally cannot see Tan being prepared to continually pump in millions every month if we don't get promotion.I think that he will either bale out or have a massive cost cutting exercise in terms of players and back room staff.
Sat Nov 01, 2014 9:42 am
Quakerman wrote:Like a lot of long term supporters the poster harks back to the 'good old days' but football has moved on, it had to because of Hillsborough.I don't miss those days when it was more about gang violence, you could not take children, fans were treated like animals herded and shepherded to and from the grounds and fenced in.
Now, it has become sanitised, corporate because of the Sky TV money, but it is also a safe environment to take children everyone has a seat, and most stadiums are modern and safe.
As to City we will have to see how this season pans out,I personally cannot see Tan being prepared to continually pump in millions every month if we don't get promotion.I think that he will either bale out or have a massive cost cutting exercise in terms of players and back room staff.
Sat Nov 01, 2014 9:51 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 10:08 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 10:54 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 11:22 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 11:39 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 11:53 am
Sat Nov 01, 2014 12:43 pm
Bluetwin wrote:No-one else seems to have the bollocks to say so I will. Or as the OP said I'm bringing it on.
As for the Red well I agree!
All the rest is sentimental, rose tinted rubbish, posted in an ethnocentric way.
You can't bring the past back and neither should we want to! As for things like debt the club as always been in debt. Only difference was years ago we couldn't afford to pay the pies supplier and the tea lady and that was when the debt was smaller.
Sat Nov 01, 2014 12:56 pm
Sun Nov 02, 2014 5:17 pm
Mon Nov 03, 2014 10:51 pm
Mon Nov 03, 2014 10:53 pm
alfie sherwood wrote:Thanks once again for all the kind words. I really appreciate it.
I've written loads of blogs and posts over the past few years (some would say - with plenty of justification - far too many!) but I wrote this in about 10 mins - in between ferrying my kids all over Cardiff - and it's probably the post I'm most happy with. I'm really glad it struck a chord with a few people.