But just because we can, it doesn't necessarily mean that we should.
Oh, I agree as I said to [MENTION=232]Simster[/MENTION]'s opening post.
All I was doing was trying to explain why there is a difference between the old days and now.
But just because we can, it doesn't necessarily mean that we should.
A good post only undermined by your own use of the mawkish, American phrase "passed away" when you mean died.
I can't remember who ..( thought it was Midlands)..but judging by Bozzas post it's been mentioned before
bereft of life he rests in peace... he has gone to meet his maker... he's run down the curtain and joined the bleedin choir invisibile!
Beautiful plumage!
Even worse, the recent fad to say 'passed', like you've just moved from A to B.
The plumage don't enter into it!
....but, when we all clapped on the 65th minute to remember Tony ( woodingdean seagull) who was the REMF chair and all round great supporter and genuinely fantastic guy, the gods looked down on us and we scored exactly as his face appeared on the main screens!
Extremely poignant moment to those of us who loved him dearly!
I was going to post about him. He shuffled out of the Amex aged 94 having just seen the Albion absolutely BATTER QPR 4-0 and sadly died near the train station.But for Tony it was entirely right as the REMF are a charity that have touched thousands.
There was (cant remember when) a round of applause for a supporter who passed away and he was 96 or whatever. I mean come on.
information virility
I'm going to use this phrase in a meeting.
....but, when we all clapped on the 65th minute to remember Tony ( woodingdean seagull) who was the REMF chair and all round great supporter and genuinely fantastic guy, the gods looked down on us and we scored exactly as his face appeared on the main screens!
Extremely poignant moment to those of us who loved him dearly!
I think that validates Simster's point, As you say he was one of our own, people knew him personally, it wasn't just some bloke (or group of people) with zero relevance to Brighton.
Don't Southampton have a single 'remembrance' event on the home match nearest to November 1st? (All Saints Day).
It was done at Villa v Leeds last week
Exactly. I never met Woodingdean Seagull and he didn't mean any more to me (or most of us) than any other Albion fan. And judging by what people have told me about him (although I could be wrong), he was so unassuming that he'd almost have been embarrassed to have a minute's applause in his own name.Good example though but it just illustrates the problem.
When it comes down to it very few of us, including dear Tony, are known by many other people in an Albion Amex crowd. So just where do you draw the line? Who gets the special treatment and who doesn't?