Neville's Breakfast
Well-known member
Will there be a safe standing area in the 1901 Club
You can but ask. Can 1901ers stand for that length of time though ? Especially without a nice free cup of tea....::
Will there be a safe standing area in the 1901 Club
Shame, that's how it should look
I guess most fans that like standing,are already standing.IMO the safe standing has to be cheaper for take-up. IS the north stand full to capacity every match at the moment ?
Shame, that's how it should look
Safe standing would let you edge towards the exit without being spotted!
Safe Standing Fans' Forum next Thursday (27th) - http://www.seagulls.co.uk/news/article/2016-17/safe-standing-brighton-hove-albion-3371213.aspx
Tickets/spaces still available for this at the Amex tonight. Might be worth going along if standing is something you have an interest in.
I am surprised by the apparent apathy towards this given comments on standing and being made to sit down in the past.
I'm not that surprised, as personally I'm completely apathetic towards safe standing. Its such a watered down, sanitised version of what we remember as being terraces that I honestly don't really see the point. You'll still be allocated a "space" in front of your rail seat number, it won't be a free-for-all to stand where you like. You're all still in rows. The only difference is you've got a rail to lean on, and a slightly crappier seat to sit on at half time.
I think some people like the idea of standing at football again in a nostalgic sense, but its so far removed from what we used to have that I think it'll be very underwhelming. I've no objection to it obviously. If there's a strong desire for (say) the North Stand to be safe standing then fine, choice is never a bad thing. But I wouldn't be giving up my seat in the WSU for it any time soon.
From a personal perspective I agree entirely. I'd much rather sit down these days.
There did seem to be a fair few people however who were very pro this when the Amex opened but now it's a possibility there doesn't seem to be much interest.
Maybe its because people have now seen what safe standing would actually comprise of.
As I've said on another thread on this subject, forget this safe standing / rail seats rubbish. There's absolutely no reason whatsover why terraces couldn't be brought back perfectly safely to our stadiums. Thousands and thousands of fans stand on them week-in, week-out in the lower leagues without incident, and with the modern stadiums we have in the PL / Championship, it would be perfectly simple and safe for terraced areas to return. Nobody will ever convince me otherwise.
There is a big difference between a sparsely populated terrace in the lower leagues and what would be packed terraces in the premier league and championship. As I understand it, safe standing means you get an allocated space where as what some remember as the glory days was the ability to stand where you like. To some, that enable a sense of anonymity. These days there are of course far more CCTV cameras so the minority that would be out to cause trouble would be readily identified. Does anyone genuinely think the situation last night at West Ham would have been better had there been terraces?
I'm not that surprised, as personally I'm completely apathetic towards safe standing. Its such a watered down, sanitised version of what we remember as being terraces that I honestly don't really see the point. You'll still be allocated a "space" in front of your rail seat number, it won't be a free-for-all to stand where you like. You're all still in rows. The only difference is you've got a rail to lean on, and a slightly crappier seat to sit on at half time.
I think some people like the idea of standing at football again in a nostalgic sense, but its so far removed from what we used to have that I think it'll be very underwhelming. I've no objection to it obviously. If there's a strong desire for (say) the North Stand to be safe standing then fine, choice is never a bad thing. But I wouldn't be giving up my seat in the WSU for it any time soon.