Nitram
Well-known member
- Jul 16, 2013
- 2,263
Jumpers for goalposts1) When I was younger my parents would buy my season ticket as a christmas present for me, I'm sure I'm not the only one who has been in that position - people at an age where their parents will buy their season ticket, but aren't going to give them money each game to buy food, etc. Other people get one-off tickets as gifts, The games for a tenner, the bring a friend half-price, and other special deals, winning competitions, local community activities etc. For some it's the equivalent of a holiday - can't afford a few hundred quid to go away, but like to give yourself a treat now and again. Having a ticket to a game doesn't mean you paid top dollar for it.
2) Who said anything about poverty? There is a difference between being poor and living in poverty. There are people who live on a tight budget, but that budget allows for social activities and events, maybe it involves season tickets, maybe occasional tickets when they're on offer. But by banning flasks, and bottles with tops, the club has already made it difficult to bring your own drinks with you (thus saving money on refreshments/snacks - I know, I know, 'just don't have them it's only two hours, ffs' - but still...). If you're living on a budget and using the commonly advised tactic of using cash to pay for things to make your budget into a tangible thing, taking that away complicates things further for you.
3) What happened to football being 'for the people'? All this 'if you can't afford it, don't go' is great, until it's you* that can't afford it, then it becomes about football being too expensive and being taken away from its working class roots. Too corporate. It's all about the hipsters coming down from London paying over the top prices. Footballs gone, man, it's all about the money now.
*I don't know if that specifically applies to you, but my intent in that sentence is the more general interpretation of 'you' rather than you specifically.