middletoenail
Well-known member
The ethnicity of a large proportion of the towns population don't care for football so that won't help.
Will be a lot of interest in Crawley I'd imagine, despite what people say on here their crowds are respecstble, have Zero debt and a very supportive local council. If someone invests in a new stadium with non match day facilities they will thrive and are easily capable of pushing for 10k averages. Good luck to them
They average about 3000 in League One, have a capacity of nearly 6000, and bar and social facilities already at the stadium - what investment are you talking about that is suddenly going to treble their gates and make them thrive!? Where are they going to get the money for it? The owners are selling for a reason, and it's because they've realised, like a house in a particularly area, no matter how much you tart it up, how big you make it, it will reach a ceiling for that area.
That isn't what he was saying. Think you need to read his post again.
Crawley's no more, and perhaps less, it's own urban hub, and no further out of The Smoke, perhaps closer, thanks to the M23, than Guilford, or Slough, or Hemel Hempsted, or Basildon... It's as much London in its human geography as they are, whatever independence its market-town antecedents suggest."Stuck like a tick in the London suburbs "
Crawley's no more, and perhaps less, it's own urban hub, and no further out of The Smoke, perhaps closer, thanks to the M23, than Guilford, or Slough, or Hemel Hempsted, or Basildon... It's as much London in its human geography as they are, whatever independence its market-town antecedents suggest.
I'm guessing it's not as nice as Chantilly, Virginia (Dulles International) -- but Chantilly's DC, and not the Shenandoah Valley, despite what the odometer says.
I paid £16 for a standing ticket this week at Barnet v Fleetwood and £20 a fortnight or so ago at Cowdenbeath v Partick Thistle, so £20 seems far to watch league 1 football,
Indeed. If they'd enjoyed their current level of success whilst we were playing at Withdean (or even Gillingham) I reckon their support would have been much higher, hell they'd even be higher up the pyramid than we were for quite a time during 'the wilderness years'. I wonder if people would have been quite so dismissive of their potential threat to our fanbase then?Sadly (for them) their arrival in the big time coincided with a £100 million pound stadium opening 20 miles down the road. ...
Sussex, or London? It's a real needle they have to thread. They're maybe closer in miles to Brighton than London, but to all intents and purposes, they're located in a London suburb. Hell, to the big world, Gatwick's synonymous with London, and it's in Crawley. They're not really a London club, despite being stuck like a tick in the London suburbs. And there's probably too much, or perilously close to too much, London football as it it. How many League teams are there inside the M25? How many of them hang by a thread?
I do believe Mr Cathedra has been in the States all his life as he is a born and bred American.You've been in the states for too long, apart from Basildon maybe no one ever thinks of those towns as part of London !
I do believe Mr Cathedra has been in the States all his life as he is a born and bred American.
The ethnicity of a large proportion of the towns population don't care for football so that won't help.
You've been in the states for too long, apart from Basildon maybe no one ever thinks of those towns as part of London !
Crawley's demographics are here: http://www.crawley.gov.uk/pw/web/int010668
Which "large proportion" don't care for football ?
Crawley's demographics are here: http://www.crawley.gov.uk/pw/web/int010668
Which "large proportion" don't care for football ?