Pretty pink fairy
Banned
- Jan 30, 2008
- 31,981
- Thread starter
- #21
They'll be the Luton Town of their league.
Stuck in it for years with the highest crowds but will cause trouble everywhere they go.
regards
DR
They'll be the Luton Town of their league.
Stuck in it for years with the highest crowds but will cause trouble everywhere they go.
It is the point. Pompey have tasted the big time in very recent memory, whereas we went from one of football's lowest points, attendance wise (1980s), straight into a 1990s on-field slump which it took us almost twenty years to recover from. Pompey's being in the Premier League would have attracted people back to the club who hadn't been for years. Those people don't just go away.
And there is also the fact that recovery from adversity can boost spirits hugely. Look at the reaction to the Albion after the original Fans United day. There was a sense that we'd reached rock bottom by then, and were playing in front of crowds of 4,000. Fans United pulled in 11,000 or so, many of whom kept coming back once the realisation came that we were better when everyone pitched in and pulled together.
Pompey have ended up (deservedly) near the bottom, but they now have something to aim for, and it's going to attract those same supporters back. I would absolutely expect that- they think they're going to get promoted now.
Didn't Bradford City sell 10,000 season tickets last season?
and the season beforeDidn't Bradford City sell 10,000 season tickets last season?
cheap train fares from brighton anyoneeven cheaper if you pay cash or cheque
how do you work that one out we struggled to sell out withdeanwe'd still do alright for fans, huge catchment area for us and many would still go,true fans who couldn't get to watch at withdean. Don't worry yourself too much, it's bad for you.
regards
DR
caused problems last night in havent so im told
caused problems last night in havent so im told
A warm-up for League Two. Plenty of chances at places like Oxford, Newport, Wimbledon, Bristol Rovers, Plymouth, Southend etc.
That's the mentality of big clubs in divisions they feel they shouldn't be in especially after point deductions. Most of the fans hold a grudge against the FA and look for bother.
regards
DR
Can someone explain to me what "regards, DR" is please.
A warm-up for League Two. Plenty of chances at places like Oxford, Newport, Wimbledon, Bristol Rovers, Plymouth, Southend etc.
That's the mentality of big clubs in divisions they feel they shouldn't be in especially after point deductions. Most of the fans hold a grudge against the FA and look for bother.
£199 for as season ticket or £20 pound on the day a no brainer really when you have 23 Home games in a season,also handy if you enjoy a good cup run but that doesn't happen to lower league clubs does it?They have done for the last ten years or so, because they have a scheme where they offer a number of tickets for a really cheap price.
Sums it up really.
Short answer to the OP's original question: no idea. After all the euphoria of season 1 at the Amex, you might have expected play-off disappointment and all the fallout that followed to have dented season ticket figures significantly for this season. That doesn't so far look to be the case. Would we have 23k season ticket holders if we suddenly tumbled down to League 2? Almost certainly not. Would we still have 8-10k? You'd hope so, because as so many have tirelessly pointed out, many of those dubbed JCLs are actually JCBs – people who have always been Albion fans, not sudden converts to a bandwagon, but people who for all sorts of reasons didn't want a season ticket for Withdean.
Now we've got 'em back, let's try to keep 'em – we've got a big stadium to fill. I've got a good feeling about this season now.
Good luck to Pompey, experiencing 'real football' and visiting places they'd long forgotten about. But I'm really not that interested in what they get up to.