Going back to the 50s the rivalry was us and Portsmouth and Southampton with Bournemouth. Palace were never even mentioned either for or against.
I don't have an issue with AN's comments. It's only a throwaway line, and it is an opinion piece, so he gives his. Just because some of might not share his viewpoint doesn't make him any less of a journalist.
Personally I loathe Palace, wish they lose every game, and won't watch MoTD if they have won..............which means I have watched a lot of MoTD in the last 12 months.
I reckon about 60 is the youngest cut off age to possibly cling onto the "Pompey are our true rivals" delusion. Don't want to be unkind to individuals but it smacks of some sort of Harry Enfield character behaviour.
I wish with every bone in my body for Palace to keep losing and go down but unfortunately they have a number of very winnable home fixtures left and the bottom 3 are also set on helping them survive with a very low points total.
Compensation for Palace staying up will come when we can get up, strengthen, and then help relegate them.
Do you really think Leicester see Coventry as their main rival? Not in my experience they don't. Whether Derby or Forest reciprocate it is irrelevant.
Well I'm in that age group and I don't think Portsmouth were ever our real rivals. We've had our moments of course, but as has been pointed out by many others It's them and Southampton and vice-versa.
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My dad told me that growing up in Shoreham in the 40s and 50s a lot of the time he used to go to watch the Albion and Pompey on alternate Saturdays. Albion as a supporter and Pompey games as an interested neutral. Apparently quite a few did the same. We were both there when the rivalry with Palace started and I can assure you that there is no way my old man would have gone to Selhurst oin any terms other than wanting the visiting side to win. If he was still alive today he'd be 77, so I don't get this 'Palace rivalry only for the youngsters' stuff either
As BG points out, the real rivalry is with Portsmouth #twats
Apart from the fact that we only played Portsmouth ONCE in the 1950s of course. We played Palace EIGHTEEN times in the same decade
Portsmouth and Southampton HATE each other and it goes WAY deeper than football. Southampton regard Bournemouth as a minor irritation.
As far as I'm concerned, the Palace thing grew (as did most football rivalries) in the mid 70s, when the tribal element of football supporting really took off. That, Alan Mullery, Ron Challis and the 17 meetings between '74 and '81 ALL of which meant something.
We played Portsmouth 5 times in the 1970s
I seem to remember we didn't like Bournemouth, either, in the early 1970s and recall some hassle from their supporters down there then - even on a weekend school trip to Bridport.....
Not at all. One may think about Pompey if one of from West Sussex but here in the East Portsmouth doesn't register. I believe we've played palace more than them anyway and we are nearer to palace as well.
His article (no link attached - sorry Andy) today starts with:
"The most meaningful result at the weekend came at the Olympic Stadium. Not because Palace were hammered - the manufactured rivalry with Albion has never really interested me.."
Get her!
As I understand it, this was one of those passing rivalries, pre-Palace. I believe it stemmed from a season we were both vying for promotion to what is now the Championship and they "took" the north stand back in the days when there was no segregation and all you had to do was get there early enough to stand where you wanted.Now Bournemouth, that's a different matter.
Charlton are another side it's hard to care about in a negative way - certainly nobody else in South or East London does.
Google has Brighton to Croydon as 43 miles and Brighton to Pompey as 50 so that's nowhere near 'almost exactly the same'. They are both quite near though. From Hastings in the East it's only 59 miles to Croydon but a whopping 83 to Portsmouth.From Eastbourne maybe so, but from Brighton the distance to either Croydon or Portsmouth is almost exactly the same.
Always enjoyed Naylor's write-ups. That snipe was a little unnecessary, and patently untrue to boot.
Personally I find non-local rivalry a lot more interesting to be honest... I think Leicester and Portsmouth aren't best of friends and nor are Plymouth and Burnley.