Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Guest Phil K

Think the stadium looks class with a bit of colour (and no SD is not colour, it's filth)

The SD is as much colour as any grafitti is

Link to post
Share on other sites

Sickening that our ground is being littered with logo's from the crooks and spivs at the IOC.

 

Sports Direct are a far less offensive brand.

 

:thup:

 

The IOC make FIFA look reputable as an organisation.

 

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_8CgZn7SSp9g/STjHermF-1I/AAAAAAAAAZM/G9kSGOR-hnY/s400/broken+record.jpg

Link to post
Share on other sites

The peeled off stickers spoil it.

 

Exactly! I wish they'd send a bloke out with a sponge to sort it out. It's been like that for ages.

 

I'm sure they were stickers with 'FTM' on it, i was completely rattled.

 

'Brewcies wun ov us. BNP. FTM'.

 

Rattled.

Link to post
Share on other sites

The peeled off stickers spoil it.

 

Exactly! I wish they'd send a bloke out with a sponge to sort it out. It's been like that for ages.

 

Write "St James' Park" on it, it'll be spotless within the hour.

Link to post
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
United Ready For Olympic Welcome

 

By Hannah Briffaut

It has been more than two years in the planning, but finally Olympic football comes to Tyneside this week, when the stadium plays host to two games of Olympic football on Thursday 26th July.

For the dozens of Newcastle United staff whose job it has been to get the stadium ready, it is hard to believe that 24 months of intense planning, organising and managing will soon be coming to a close.

Newcastle United have worked with the City Council, LOCOG and several other organisations to ensure that the club and the city can play host to the Olympic dream on Tyneside. But, as staff at the club soon learned, Olympic preparation and logistics is in a different league to the Premiership.

 

An additional 440 staff, stewards and security officials have been recruited and trained, and newly installed cabling for live TV broadcasts and online communications stretch over 15 miles - enough to cable to run from St James' Park to the coast and back! The existing home and away dressing rooms remain, but an additional two dressing rooms have also been created to allow for the double-header on Thursday when Mexico take on South Korea and Gabon face Switzerland. The luxurious Players' Lounge, where players and their families relax after home games, has been turned - temporarily - into a dressing room with showers, treatment tables and lockers.

 

As with all Olympic venues, to comply with advertising rules up to 30,000 posters, team photos, hoardings and signage have been temporarily covered for the period of the games. And over a dozen new rooms within the stadium have been created to house international media, Olympics organisers and match officials.

 

Newcastle United's stadium manager, Eddie Rutherford, said: "The process of preparing for the Olympics has been a big team effort, not just amongst our staff at the club, but with hundreds of newly-recruited Olympics staff, our colleagues at the City Council, emergency services and local contractors amongst others.

 

"By having such a diverse group of people working together it provides a wealth of expertise and knowledge to make the Olympics a once in a life time experience."

 

To ensure that the Olympics provides an enjoyable, family-friendly, safe and secure environment, additional security measures have been put in place at the ground and multi-agency security protocols have been tried and tested repeatedly.

Steve Storey, head of security at Newcastle United, said: "It's our priority to ensure that people have a safe and enjoyable Olympics experience in Newcastle. The preparations we've made from a security point-of-view are very different from those in place for Premier League games. Fans coming to the games will go through an airport-style security experience for everyone's safety and peace-of-mind. It's definitely worth them turning up far earlier for the games than they would for a normal Premier League match, to allow time to get supporters through the search area."

 

Unlike a Premiership match, there will be no segregation between the opposing fans in the stands, with the focus on promoting the 'Olympic spirit' as opposed to rivalry.

Arguably the hardest work of all, however, starts when the Olympics ends. Staff at Newcastle United have just two weeks from the end of the Games to put everything back to normal in time for the new football season. Steve added: "The main challenge will be getting everything changed back to normal within such a tight time scale. But nothing is impossible, and with the great team we have here I know that we will be up and running back to normal in no time."

 

http://www.nufc.co.uk/articles/20120725/united-ready-for-olympic-welcome_2281670_2860203

 

 

 

http://gifsoup.com/webroot/animatedgifs/973790_o.gif

Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest Mackem Logic

Mike is giving these away to supporters on the way in for the footy matches, apparently...

 

AyujxQICMAA1GkJ.jpg

 

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest Mackem Logic

I know they can't show the SportsDirect signs. Didn't know 'Newcastle United' is not allowed though.

 

The 'Newcastle United' is allowed, isnt it?

 

This from twitter earlier...

 

AyuWqpdCAAEHAau.jpg

Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest Mackem Logic

http://a8.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/314737_464520016900480_197599822_n.jpg

 

Is that a screen in the Gallowgate-Leazes corner?

 

The Gallowgate-Leazes corner?  ???

Link to post
Share on other sites

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
×
×
  • Create New...