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leffe186

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Everything posted by leffe186

  1. I think Grealish comes up so much because there are some pretty clear and egregious examples of him flinging himself to the ground when he clearly hasn’t been touched. He certainly did get rough treatment on the regular. Mane’s the one that gets me riled up. Yet all this frustration with Premier League players diving gets put into perspective with every Clasico I watch.
  2. I think lack of empathy does stem from monetization, because it stems in part from the lack of parity. As well as making it harder for, say, your typical Ipswich fan to have empathy with your typical Liverpool fan it’s even harder for them to have empathy with, for example, some Indonesian guy who’s decided he supports Liverpool because they’re good. Or whatever. Not that those guys didn’t exist years ago, but there are so many more of them now, we’re in more direct contact, and they factor more into clubs’ financial considerations.
  3. I will say, looking from outside, you overrated Lascelles for a while and now you’re overrating Burn in a very similar way. That’s just natural fan stuff though.
  4. leffe186

    England

    And the whole point we’re making is that that’s silly. You get one chance every two years. There are at least half a dozen really really good teams. You get close and then try your best and sometimes that isn’t quite good enough. Sometimes you get a break and win. He has Pickford as arguably his best keeper FFS. Switching Dan Burn for Maguire, much like Lascelles for Maguire, isn’t going to make a difference. We’ve got a couple of great players, a handful of very good ones, and a really good team spirit. I do wish we had a better tactical coach, tbh, and the one big argument is that we could have beaten Italy maybe with different penalty takers. You just can’t say that any team “should” win a World Cup or be European champions.
  5. I brought it with me to the US. Fun seeing what the docs here make of it I don’t think I’ve ever laughed as much in my life as when I first read it. Surprised nobody mentioned Black Bag.
  6. What’s his team’s value? Many of the top guys have values over £104.
  7. Man City weren’t a nothing club to me, but then someone came along and gave them infinite money. See also Chelsea. After that happened nothing they achieved really meant anything to me.
  8. “Always” is a moveable feast though. My always goes from the late 70s, my Dad’s from the 50s etc etc. Clubs have ebbed and flowed. We’re dangerously close to that stupid tired old conversation about what makes one club “bigger” than another
  9. I’m a Spurs fan. I didn’t want anyone to win the league except us (or Leyton Orient). In the rare occasions when we didn’t win the league, someone has to. I’d much rather it was a nothing club that I didn’t give a shit about. Ergo, come on Man City!
  10. Dunno - think you can draw some direct parallels. Both parties were basically given huge amounts of money by their state (in different ways). Both parties looked to diversify their investments and I think it’s fair to say both (Abramovich and PIF) were looking for some international acceptance and acknowledgement.
  11. Yup was about to post exactly this then did something else and forgot about it
  12. Cheers . That’s partly my point though, it’s not so much about whether my team is good or not, more that I just don’t like what football is any more. I was biding my time for a few years and when the CL run came along my plan was to sign off after one of our greatest achievements. One soft as fuck handball later…
  13. …So yeah, a combination of things but parity (or the loss of it) was at the root. Abramovich. The Champions League. Mansour. West Ham and the Olympic Stadium vs Leyton Orient. The utter balls-up they’re making of VAR. Man City, Man U and Liverpool shirts all over London playgrounds. Drip. Drip. Drip. I stuck with it for a while because my team seemed to be doing it the “right” way, but I’d had enough a long time ago. Found out this week that one of my Dad’s passwords is KaneSon61, which simultaneously make me feel happy and sad. He’d become disillusioned with modern football way before me but was never not going to be a Spurs fan and just fucking loves the game. I still want Spurs to win every game 5-0. It just truly does not feel like the same game any more, and the number of ways that was true reached critical mass. I’m just an old fogey, basically
  14. I find myself thinking about it a lot and re-examining it constantly because football was so much to me for so long and it was a very hard decision. My first Spurs game was in the Second Division - Spurs v Mansfield. Grew up in North London, trained with Enfield borough’s team in the old ball court under the West Stand, used to walk to home games with my Dad. I’ve been through ups and downs, season ticket holder for years, member for years, all the things. I think it dates back to Abramovich tbh. Of course we’d already had Jack Walker, and Chelsea were already doing better thanks to Ken Bates spending money he didn’t have, but a guy coming in and spending the ludicrous money Chelsea were spending changed the game - for me at least. I’d grown up with some ebb and flow in the top flight - sure, Liverpool were super-dominant and the local glory-hunters affected scouse accents but you felt like a team like Villa, or Ipswich, or eventually Newcastle could get a good manager, some breaks, and come through. I don’t think I fully realized the change at the time because a couple of years later Spurs got Jol in, ditched some old-timers, got in a lot of young players and built from the bottom. It was fun, and felt “right”. Of course, Chelsea saw that and immediately threw money at Frank Arnesen, which was hard to take. Still, there have always been haves and have-nots in football and we kept building up, so although the difference in wage bills between the CL clubs and the rest seemed to be widening I could suck it up. The 2000s were completely dominated by the top four. Any idea of parity was out of the window. Like Keegan said, the Premier League was in danger of being one of the most boring leagues in the world, and unless you gave a shit about the top four, Barca or Real the CL was going the same way. Then along came Sheikh Mansour. (sorry going to eat dinner)
  15. That works. So if it’s equally morally questionable (and if you factor in the NCAA then that’s another layer, but I digress) then the parity afforded by the salary cap and draft tips the balance towards the NFL
  16. Not a chance. She was living her life then a Nazi forced her at a crisis point to choose between her children. Me and other footy fans are living our footy fan lives and at any point we can decide to back away from football a bit, to whatever degree we like. If you can come up with an example where a choice to withdraw from football is even remotely similar to Sophie’s Choice I’d love to hear it
  17. That’s definitely true, and definitely closer. There’s certainly a huge scope of what people get from football personally and from the connections and community it brings. I know a couple of Spurs fans with learning difficulties for whom Spurs is essentially their life. It’s not a realistic choice for everyone, and I would never suggest that. Just that when Thiago says we’re all hypocrites (a) he’s right but (b) insofar as some of us have made the choice to not be football fans in the same way, he’s not 100% right. Nearly everyone on this forum could decide to stop going to Newcastle matches/watching Sky if they chose to. It would be bloody hard, but they could. If they didn’t I wouldn’t berate them for “supporting” Saudi Arabia, but you yourself have pointed out the stark irony of “Support the team, not the regime.” Sophie’s Choice is still a terrible analogy though It fails at the first step. She was forced to choose.
  18. Fingers crossed, and thanks! I think using Sophie’s Choice as an analogy rather makes the opposite point. She had to choose between saving her daughter and “killing” her son, or saving her son and “killing her daughter. An awful choice to make. I had to choose between watching Spurs games and football in general, arguing passionately about it and Spurs online and in bars (VAR etc), keeping up the membership and going to games when I get to the UK…and doing something else with that time and money. Very much not the same as Sophie’s . And so I say again, we all have a choice to walk away from football to a greater or lesser extent. It’s harder for some, sure, but still a choice. You cannot walk away from being a Newcastle United fan at heart, but you can walk away from some of the things that being a fan would entail.
  19. Pretty sure I used the other one. I totally bollocksed the last couple of weeks up by not taking it seriously Ended up bench boosting this week for the hell of it and gained about 4pts or something.
  20. Yeah that’s fair to a point, but it depends upon what you mean by those “strong ties”. I will be a Spurs fan forever and just yesterday I wore a Spurs shirt to my Dad’s ICU bed to see if it would cheer him up/jolt him out of his confusion (it did!) I have a deep, irreversible emotional connection to Spurs and the community around it. I just try not to engage with football as much any more. The big, big advantage I have is that I moved to the US. I’ve got some of that feeling of sports community and belonging because we’re near Cleveland and I married into a Browns/Cavs etc family - maybe that’s filled the void. It is absolutely exponentially harder to choose not to actively support a team when you are living in that community, family/friends are going to the games etc. I already had two randoms commiserate with me yesterday because I was wearing the Spurs shirt out and about. You’re definitely right in that circumstances made it easier for me to kind of edge away from football. All kinds of personal things - moving to the US, snapping my Achilles and so retiring from playing, having kids etc. I just dispute the idea that it’s not a choice. It’s a very complicated and nuanced one, but I can choose to subscribe to the Premier League on telly, or take the piss out of my Man City friend, or go on Spurscommunity to rant about the games, or whatever. Football just feels broken to me, so I’m going to try to disengage from it somewhat. Sophie’s Choice is a terrible analogy btw
  21. Bravo. Although I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again, we’re not all hypocrites. I’ve been done with this whole thing for a while now, and it sounds like Triggs is too. You really do have a choice. Of course I’ll always be a Spurs fan at heart and when I look at the scores I’ll be happy when we win and sad when we lose, but I’m out for the most part. Barely even watch football any more. My heart’s broken. Not trying to be holier-than-thou, honestly, just it seems like sometimes people act like they don’t have a choice. You don’t have a choice whether to support Newcastle in your heart or not, but you do have a choice in what you do about it.
  22. Still got my free hit left but not sure when to use it. Any double weeks left?
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