greyseagull
New member
We’ve never been close. In fact, it’s been a funny, disjointed, relationship right from the start. I don’t think we’ve ever hugged, or even shaken hands. We are quite distant from one another in terms of sharing feelings – the air can quite often be filled with an awkward silence when we are together. There’s not much to be said. That’s until we get on to football…
He took to me my first Albion game in 1986 and we haven’t looked back. As sad as it might sound to some, football – and more specifically Brighton – is the glue that keeps us together and connected. There’s not much else going on. All my memories of Dad revolve around football, be it from the terraces of The Goldstone, him watching me play, the look of pride he had when I played for Albion Youth Team and now, from the luxury of The Amex. My memories of Dad will all be associated with football, and I can’t wait for us to create some more in the coming years. I will never forget the image of my Dad – a 60-year old - bouncing up and down about 6ft in the air when we scored the last minute winner against Forest this season. Or when he plucked the ball out of the air in the North East Terrace of the Goldstone when Mark Beeney cleared the ball only to drop it on his head and the North Stand sung “sign him up, sign him up…”
People say “football’s just a game”, “how can you get so passionate about a club so much”, etc. etc. Well, football isn’t just a game, not in my case, and I’m sure I speak for many families out there. Football brings people together, from all walks of life. Doctors, bricklayers, lawyers, students, accountants, postmen, and people of all different ethnic backgrounds; they all sit side-by-side singing in unison, cheering their team on each and every week. Football does so much good. It evokes so many emotions – pride, glory, pain, anguish, ecstasy. I even find it somewhat mesmerising when the opposition score and the thousands of away fans create a wave of pure delight. Where else could you see such a sight? Every single fan of football is united in our differences, backgrounds, and rivalries.
There’s really no point to this post except to try and reinforce the notion that there’s more to football that what is believed. It’s not just about the results or the position of our clubs. There’s real drama and real beauty behind the game too and it’s this that has kept me and Dad bonded throughout our lives and I guess always will. I hope there’s more of you out there that feel the same way.
He took to me my first Albion game in 1986 and we haven’t looked back. As sad as it might sound to some, football – and more specifically Brighton – is the glue that keeps us together and connected. There’s not much else going on. All my memories of Dad revolve around football, be it from the terraces of The Goldstone, him watching me play, the look of pride he had when I played for Albion Youth Team and now, from the luxury of The Amex. My memories of Dad will all be associated with football, and I can’t wait for us to create some more in the coming years. I will never forget the image of my Dad – a 60-year old - bouncing up and down about 6ft in the air when we scored the last minute winner against Forest this season. Or when he plucked the ball out of the air in the North East Terrace of the Goldstone when Mark Beeney cleared the ball only to drop it on his head and the North Stand sung “sign him up, sign him up…”
People say “football’s just a game”, “how can you get so passionate about a club so much”, etc. etc. Well, football isn’t just a game, not in my case, and I’m sure I speak for many families out there. Football brings people together, from all walks of life. Doctors, bricklayers, lawyers, students, accountants, postmen, and people of all different ethnic backgrounds; they all sit side-by-side singing in unison, cheering their team on each and every week. Football does so much good. It evokes so many emotions – pride, glory, pain, anguish, ecstasy. I even find it somewhat mesmerising when the opposition score and the thousands of away fans create a wave of pure delight. Where else could you see such a sight? Every single fan of football is united in our differences, backgrounds, and rivalries.
There’s really no point to this post except to try and reinforce the notion that there’s more to football that what is believed. It’s not just about the results or the position of our clubs. There’s real drama and real beauty behind the game too and it’s this that has kept me and Dad bonded throughout our lives and I guess always will. I hope there’s more of you out there that feel the same way.
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