Spurs' hasn't fallen on its arse though, has it?
It took ten years to get permission granted for a 22,000 seat stadium. The Everton one has been on the drawing boards for what, 2 or 3 years? And is meant to hold 60,000 and had a new Tescos planned as part of it.But I don't understand. We've got so many people here on NSC who think getting planning permission for a stadium is a doddle and that Martin Perry should have done this in a blink of an eyelid.
...It's a view from outside the stadium - showing one of the main roads with one bus and a couple of cars (I think - can't be arsed to look again). Have these people ever been to London?
Anyone else find Everton's self imposed moniker of "the people's club" just a tad pretentious?
Liverpool is also bidding for a 2012 world cup host city, but that bid is assuming there will be two new stadia by then. Now it looks like there will be none, as Anfield is also hopelessly stalled
I'm not sure that it's pretentious. It's in reaction to all those charter flights from Oslo that fill up Anfield I think.Anyone else find Everton's self imposed moniker of "the people's club" just a tad pretentious?
Liverpool is NOT a 2012 Football venue.
Manchester [OT]
London [Wembley]
Newcastle [St.JP]
'The midlands' [as yet to be decided].
These are FACT, as confirmed to me in oerson at LOCOG yesterday.
He MEANT 2018, you plum.
There's irony there, SIMON.Probably would have been clearer if he'd put '2018' then. :thiumbsup:
It is approaching six years since David Moyes coined the phrase, 'The People's Club'.
When Moyes was appointed Everton manager in March 2002, his description of his new club captured plenty of attention.
And, as the Everton manager explained, the phrase is just as applicable now as it was when first spoken.
Moyes said in the foreword to a new book named after the mantra: “I must hear that phrase 20 times every day, and it still rings true now as much as it did when I first uttered it in March 2002."
“But I honestly had no idea quite how much people would relate to it.
“It has been suggested to me since that I was put up to using the words ‘People’s Club’ at my introductory press conference – that some kind of Everton spin doctor suggested it might be a good idea to get the fans onside right from the off.
“Nothing could be further from the truth. I never had a conversation with anybody beforehand."
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Indeed, the Scot went on to explain in more detail why he felt compelled to describe Everton as 'The People's Club'.
“What prompted it were my experiences after I knew I had got the job and was preparing to travel to Goodison Park for the press conference," he said.
“While I was leaving Preston I kept bumping into people who told me they were Evertonians and wishing me good luck.
“Everybody I spoke to seemed to be a Blue – and this was in Preston!
“Then when I drove into Merseyside everywhere I looked people seemed to be wearing Everton shirts.
“It just seemed a natural thing to say... that Everton seemed to be the People’s Club of Merseyside.
“It wasn’t a rehearsed comment. It was just something which came to mind at the time and I didn’t attach any significance to it even after I’d said it.
“It was only the next day when I saw all the newspaper headlines that I realised it had struck a chord!"
It was supposed to look like this if it happened
theres a ground in germany where the colours of the stadium change depending which team are playing - anyone know of it?
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Surely any UK clubs that are too proud to share a ground just need to get a return flight to Milan. Then they'll see it's possible to be your own distinct club in a great shared facility. Simple.