aftershavedave
Well-known member
In my younger days I had a penchant for (then) exotic aftershaves and colognes. It was a name given to me by mates, shortened to afters but recently back to the original as I didn't like the "afters" connotation
I was originally Sam's Dad, but when I moved house a few years ago I had to change internet provider and got a new email address. When I tried to log on to NSC it didn't recognise me and I had forgotten my login details.I wanted to use Sam’s Dad when I joined but it was already taken.
I played as a goalkeeper on Saturday football and out on the pitch in the Sunday leagues. One of my teammates regularly called me a Donkey, maybe before it was better known as a Tony Adams insult. Eventually I settled as a centre back for Sunday football so used that as my NSC name. You couldn’t have spaces originally on NSC and I never got around to adding them once you could.
A nickname given to me by the first team of people I ever managed. They even did me a mug. Affectionate nickname I hope, god knows what they called me behind my backThere are quite a few unusual usernames on NSC, so I thought I would start a thread for people to explain why they have chosen their username (if they are happy to obviously).
The one that kicked this off for me was seeing Wellquickwoody all over the board - I'm guessing his surname might be Wood and he is (or was) rapid at running but am probably wrong
Obviously some are easily solvable so no need to provide guidance (like mine )
Yes, I certainly would have been there. What year would that have been?Did you go to the S&S dinner when Attila read Goldstone Ghosts and we all cried? I was an occasional contributor to the esteemed organ.
Does that make me Sam's Step Dad then? Must have words with Mrs DCH!I was originally Sam's Dad, but when I moved house a few years ago I had to change internet provider and got a new email address. When I tried to log on to NSC it didn't recognise me and I had forgotten my login details.
The simplest thing to do was to register a new account, and as part of my address is Hill, I became Seagull on the Hill.
No, the Gerd Muller link definitely looks like a false etymology. The only place I could find it cited was by some bloke giving his opinion on Urban Dictionary. The etymology sites that actually do research report the term to grind or destroy as going back centuries and the use to mean drunk or heavily defeated from the 1990s. Neither would be concurrent with Gerd's peak. The talk after the 1970 game was not really of Muller anyway. It was all about the substitution of Charlton that allowed Beckenbauer to run the game and the blaming of poor old Peter Bonetti.Fairly sure, not certain, that it came from Gerd Muller not a pestle & mortar. That late strike left us mullered as far as I'm aware, and Mullered as in wankered came later
Well that is interesting. I was a young-un watching that match and I'd never heard it before (I was in the East End at the time). It was parlance shortly after, for sure. As an aside my dear old nan cheered loudly on her own when he scored, to the dismay of others, she'd watched the whole match thinking that we were germany, bless herNo, the Gerd Muller link definitely looks like a false etymology. The only place I could find it cited was by some bloke giving his opinion on Urban Dictionary. The etymology sites that actually do research report the term to grind or destroy as going back centuries and the use to mean drunk or heavily defeated from the 1990s. Neither would be concurrent with Gerd's peak.
All the lyrics sites quote the P&tTTBs lyric as Mullard, not Mulllered, but Peter definitely sings 'erred', not 'ard' and I've never heard Arthur Mullard be called Arthur Mullered by anyone. The lyrics sites all take from each other, so if it was written wrong once, it will be replicated. Unfortunately, the song's not on 'Pissed and Proud' as I'm pretty sure my copy's got the song lyrics on the inner sleeve. Unless anyone can ask Del or Peter we'll never know which is right.
According to this it was common prison slang in the 1950s: https://www.worldwidewords.org/qa-mul1.html. My guess would be that some old lags made the connection and joked that Muller had mullered England after the game and that the usage spread beyond where it had previously been common.Well that is interesting. I was a young-un watching that match and I'd never heard it before (I was in the East End at the time). It was parlance shortly after, for sure. As an aside my dear old nan cheered loudly on her own when he scored, to the dismay of others, she'd watched the whole match thinking that we were germany, bless her
Cheers. I have asked on an East End FB site to explore this, I'll let you know what they say, cheers againAccording to this it was common prison slang in the 1950s: https://www.worldwidewords.org/qa-mul1.html. My guess would be that some old lags made the connection and joked that Muller had mullered England after the game and that the usage spread beyond where it had previously been common.
According to this it was common prison slang in the 1950s: https://www.worldwidewords.org/qa-mul1.html. My guess would be that some old lags made the connection and joked that Muller had mullered England after the game and that the usage spread beyond where it had previously been common
Kit Napier is the only player I can remember scoring directly from a corner.If you were in the North Stand in the mid 1970s you’d remember it being sung - when we got one - I can’t actually recall if we scored more goals from them in that period than we do today but we must have, Shirley - Tony Towner and Sully might have been on corner duty
I hate to disappoint you but I think his name is Roderick rather than Rodney.My favourite player as a kid in my first few seasons watching the Albion.
Barrow.Kit Napier is the only player I can remember scoring directly from a corner.
Can't remember who it was against but it would have been late 60's/ early 70's.
I seem to recall hearing that the only musician of note to own a mellotron 'back in the day' was Rick Wakeman. His credits include Space Oddity (Bowie). But a quick bit of research show Mike Pinder played one in the 60s for the Moody Blues. And by 71 Genesis and others had one.It incorporates my surname, is a brilliant instrument used famously by The Beatles (and many others) - think the flute sounds on Strawberry Fields Forever, or the distorted choir sounds towards the end of Paranoid Android.
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I'm a musician who has worked with synths and would love to own one one day (but they are about £2-3,000 for the models I'd be interested in, so I think it's unlikely sadly).
It also sounds a bit like the name of a Transformer which I probably thought was cool many years ago.
Thanks HWT.Barrow.