How can last nights winner be described in this way? Sounds like we're in 6th place 1 point ahead of the chasing pack, bl00dy idiots!
How can last nights winner be described in this way? Sounds like we're in 6th place 1 point ahead of the chasing pack, bl00dy idiots!
If you think this is bad now you wait until we (Fingers crossed! One day soon!) become a Premier League side.
We could be sniffing around the top two and Sky and it's pundits would still write us off.
Nobody see's Brighton as a big club, and nobody outside of Brighton is interested in reading or hearing about us.
Agree with this. It is only a "marginal gain" but the absence of media fuelled hype around our players must be an advantage in terms of them maintaining their positive focus on one game at a time.Fantastic stuff.
Hughton couldn't pay the press enough to do what they're doing. We've got to be chuffed to bits with the coverage we're getting.
How can last nights winner be described in this way? Sounds like we're in 6th place 1 point ahead of the chasing pack, bl00dy idiots!
If you think this is bad now you wait until we (Fingers crossed! One day soon!) become a Premier League side.
We could be sniffing around the top two and Sky and it's pundits would still write us off.
Nobody see's Brighton as a big club, and nobody outside of Brighton is interested in reading or hearing about us.
I want us to be plucky little Brighton in the Premier league, a bit raffish and unpredictable, but with a heart of gold.
I think the management have done a stunning job of keeping the players collective feet on the ground, while at the same time quietly going about their business.
There have been no over exuberant interviews, or premature quotes, like that of Michael Keane after Saturdays game where he was quoted as saying that Burnley now want to go on and win the league, as if they had already achieved promotion!
Keep plugging away, and you just never know what might happen to such a nice, tightly knit team, with no mega egos![/QUOTE
Don't you mean this:
One who has a stiff upper lip displays fortitude in the face of adversity, or exercises great self-restraint in the expression of emotion.[1] The phrase is most commonly heard as part of the idiom "keep a stiff upper lip", and has traditionally been used to describe an attribute of British people, who are sometimes perceived by other cultures as being unemotional.[1] A sign of weakness is trembling of the upper lip, hence the saying keep a stiff upper lip. When a person's upper lip begins to tremble, it is one of the first signs that the person is scared or shaken by experiencing deep emotion.[2]