GoingUp
Well-known member
This.
Cheered jokily.
By the time I noticed it I had missed it, I did laugh after though!
This.
Cheered jokily.
I come on. It is a bit of fun.Really poor from our fans……
Thought we were better than that, unless I’ve missed something obvious…..
So are balloons and the Mexican wave, but do they help the supportive/encouraging atmosphere we should be trying to create?I come on. It is a bit of fun.
I’ve played sport at a good level and been involved in one professionally.Jesus, lads, let’s not get too snowflakey. It’s just fans having a bit of a laugh with one of our players who we otherwise support unconditionally every week
Do you not. reckon he’s been getting the piss taken at training earlier this week from his team mates - carefully passing him stuff by hand instead of throwing etc? If you do then I’m guessing that you’ve never played a team sport at any adult level, coz he will have been nailed on for the wanker-of-the-week award.
If his confidence is affected by that, then professional sport is not for him, particularly as a goalkeeper in the world's best league.I’ve played sport at a good level and been involved in one professionally.
Of course there is banter, but there is a fine line between individual winding a player up in the sanctum of a changing room and a crowd, jumping on the bandwagon potentially damaging the confidence of a younger player (sarcastic or otherwise). Completely accept that it was possibly meant as a joke, but I’d wager not for all those who cheered.
Although different, probably why RdZ asked the crowd to support Caicedo.
I would argue that the wanker-of-the-week would have been shared with MacAllister.
Did you feel that way about Caicedo then or did you support as per the managers request?If his confidence is affected by that, then professional sport is not for him, particularly as a goalkeeper in the world's best league.
An hypothesis: now we are 'top ten, in the prem', some youngsters have acquired heightened levels of entitlement.Funny if it had been a friendly match maybe.
I guess our football supporting culture has changed to being people who want a laugh rather than doing everything possible to get behind the players and win.
You're right, Goalkeeper is the toughest position, so on the basis that he can deal with opposing fans giving him grief behind him for at lest 45 minutes then he can handle a bit of friendly home-fan banter.Did you feel that way about Caicedo then or did you support as per the managers request?
Goalkeeper is arguably the toughest position mentally anyway, why add pressure?
I thought it was disappointing and apparently could construed in two ways…… hence starting the thread.
But that’s the point, perception, ‘friendly banter’or ‘sarcastic bastards’.You're right, Goalkeeper is the toughest position, so on the basis that he can deal with opposing fans giving him grief behind him for at lest 45 minutes then he can handle a bit of friendly home-fan banter.
Caicedo is a different case. Although while we're on the subject, for all the support he's been given he's not been back to his best since the games he missed due to suspension and then being rested due to the transfer speculation. He owes us a performance.
I’m not his biggest fan but that was a touch naughty.
I must be on a different wavelength but when I heard the cheer I genuinely thought the irony was aimed at Fulham as it was the first time they had got the ball anywhere near our penalty area!
Yes.So are balloons and the Mexican wave, but do they help the supportive/encouraging atmosphere we should be trying to create?