Sheebo
Well-known member
- Jul 13, 2003
- 29,319
The start of it all for us was having no ground and coming perilously close to having no club. In the days of fanzines, and no internet as such, we had to fight the campaign to return home to the Valley. It perhaps wasn't so perilous as it was for Brighton at that time, but it was pretty close.
So fast forward to the sunny uplands when Brighton and Charlton had gone through similar journeys and had seemingly emerged out of the other side.
This is where Brighton fans ought to thank whatever they believe in, that you are owned by a Brighton fan. In that respect similar to Boro or Everton (until recently) and others, and for me it is the ideal situation...provided the fan owner can always keep the show on the road.
For us at Charlton we have been forced down that other fork in the road that has led to a distant entity acquiring a club almost as a curiosity. This is the land of changing team colours or names, appointing favoured nephews to the post of head coach, bringing in a player because a best mate said to the owner they were any good. Our particular fork in the road has not though led to dalliance with the premier league like Hull or Cardiff or Watford, nor lovely new facilities like those clubs either. Nor has our plight led to the owner being bothered about team results unlike like all the clubs with the nuttiest of owners like Birmingham or Leeds, at least these teams try to win matches however rubbish their set up may be. Our bloke does not go to matches and looks at the player stats before noticing if we have won (rarely), drawn (sometimes) or lost (very often).
So we at Charlton feel we have somehow ended up with a double whammy. We have had to journey through the Brighton, Bristol Rovers, Coventry type of have we even got a ground scenario, and shazaam we are in a deluded owner scenario with knobs on.
I know I have been making comparisons, and moaning on, and the experience you Brighton fans had to undergo in your wilderness years was shockingly bad, and as a poster said above, to the immense credit of each and every Seagull, it was indeed Brighton fans who saved Brighton at the end of the day and you should feel pride in that.
As for Saturday you will witness a stadium with huge gaps, and passion for this team in the last two years has been wrung out of us like slow torture, but you are very unlikely to see the game abandoned. It will be more like this beginning of the match against Birmingham.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAs-LNT9lXA
Oh I nearly forgot, I know Brighton had it bad regarding Gillingham especially, but I raise you five years at that vile place that exists between the back end of beyond and the middle of nowhere, Selhurst Park!
Once again sincere thanks to the Brighton fans who have offered good wishes.
Valley Floyd Road is one of my favourite songs in football - sounds class. Sang too fast there mind!