Not Andy Naylor
Well-known member
Football is suffering. To properly follow anyone is to suffer, no? Even the biggest most successful clubs, can't and don't win all the time, let alone almost every club, where nothing is EVER won except perhaps promotion every now and again.
But even by those standards, we have suffered, I put it to you. Because having once been great, and then fallen to the depths is worse, psychologically then never having been, and never expecting to. To being resigned to at the best mediocrity, and at worst... This is a nice point, I know, and I am not seeking to diss the suffering of being an Albion fan. I get it, in a way a Man U fan never can, or could because they haven't lived it and never will.
How can I explain? You could argue that two waiters, living in penury in Paris in the twenties are objectively equally miserable. But wouldn't it feel worse if one of them was a rich Russian exiled and stripped of everything by the Revolution? (And I am not saying that Leeds are in any way Tsarist aristocrats, obviously, perish the thought, just using the example to try and give colour to my argument)...
Or all those aged ladies in nineteenth century novels, who have gone down in the world and have to scratch a living working as governesses in a parvenu family that despises them and is openly contemptuous? Perhaps someone more literate than I can point them out, their names escape me.
The fans at Tranmere and Southend are hardly nouveau riche parvenus, but they were certainly openly contemptuous. "We all hate Leeds" they would chant, "You're Not Famous any More!" That we had gone down in the world was sadly obvious. Nor were we filling the back pages, or on the TV, no-one outside the division thought of us at all. But didn't the fact that they felt this need to aggrandise themselves in this way prove that actually we WERE still famous compared to them? And call me entitled if you like, maybe this demonstrates I am, but although on the day we played them on equal terms, and indeed many times they beat us, I don't believe that in wider football terms we were or are their equal. And I don't think you, if you were fair minded would disagree.
Being in the lower divisions can be a very pleasurable experience at times, don't get me wrong. This season is one of the best I have experienced in more than fifty years of following the club.
At times our football has been sublime. And there is an honesty about it that they tell me (I wouldn't know of course, as many on this thread have told me) is not present in the Premier League. I am not looking forward to all the bo11ocks in the over hyped media, there are advantages to relative obscurity. But of course it feels better to beat Barcelona in a European Cup semi final than to lose to Bristol Rovers in the rain. And the latter "suffers" by comparison to the former. And to watch your club sell its players, and ground, and training academy, to go bankrupt, and then have useless manager after useless manager playing the most dreadful football year after is to suffer. The fact that many, most, other lower league clubs have that experience as a fact of life does't make it any less painful when you are going through it.
You make interesting points but I take issue with one of the key ones, and I speak as someone from a Leeds family on my mother's side. Not necessarily a Leeds United family as, like many others, they were more fans of the RL club. But she grew up in Gelderd Road and the first league game I attended was at Elland Road when my cousin took me to see Revie's team beat Spurs 3-1 in Allan Clarke's Leeds debut.
Leeds United were not the rich Russian exile in your comparison who is naturally from the upper classes but temporarily down on their luck. It would be just as relevant to describe the Revie-era side as the parvenu family.
Before Revie, what had Leeds ever done? They had regular visits to the second tier, with 5th in 1930 their best finish. No trophies until 1968. In fact, they were in the second division when Revie became manager. Eight more seasons in the second division during the 1980s was less a fall from grace than a return to Leeds United's natural situation, looked at over its 99 years rather than the decades since Revie took over.
Most football clubs have ups and downs. We have, you have. Get used to it. The bad times make the good times better, a fact that all but a few very lucky clubs' fans understand and relish.