El Presidente said:This season is going to the wire as far as the Albion is concerned, so long as we are still in with a chance of the play offs with 3/4 matches to go I will be more than happy. It does not matter tht we are not playing football that resembles the beaches of Rio this season, for a club with one hand and foot tied behind our backs financially we are producing adequate, if not spectcular, fare.
I have been watching the Albion for nearly 30 years, and we have had more ups and downs than most clubs in that time.
6 promotions
7 relegations
twice finishing once above the Conference trap door
3 different 'home' grounds
3 visits to Wembley
Victories against Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester United, Newcastle
Defeats to Leatherhead, Sutton United, Walton and Hersham
Brilliant (Ward, Zamora, Lawrenson, Foster, Stevens, Gotsmanov, Worthington) and crap (Ashley Neale, Willie Young, Mickey Bennett, Mark Farrington) players in equal measures, the same for managers, for every Adams, Mullery, Taylor, Cattlin there has ben a Hinshelwood, Jeff Wood, Jimmy Case.
This is why I love the club, I live in Manchester and could watch a team play and win every week if I so desired (in fact I was a United fan when I was younger), but whats the point. With the Albion I get true value for money, for every high there is a low, for every cherished memory an embarrasing one. I would not swap places with any fan with any other club.
Keep the faith
A SUPERB post, Shelton.Ex Shelton Seagull said:A wise man once said “no-one goes to Luton for a good night out except people from Bedford”. How true. Last night contained all the essentials of an away game with the Albion this season.
Thameslink were up to their usual standard, thus keeping up the tradition of a rubbish train journey to the game. I seemed to have boarded the 17:07 Thameslink Magical Mystery Tour of South London train. SEE the delights of Streatham! MARVEL at the station at Tulse Hill! WONDER at the bustle of Elephant & Castle! The wisdom of running a 4 carriage train was soon revealed when we got into London and every commuter in Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire seemed to want to get on the train. And they turned the heating up meaning my leg was gently toasted after we left Kings Cross, pinned as I was, next to someone with their mp3 player turned up to full.
Luton? Seems like the wise man was right. A large billboard stood over the road leading to the stadium displaying Tottenham ticket details and exhorting people to cheer on the Spurs. Charming.
The match? Well I’d put it on a par with the Bournemouth game. Set pieces weren’t up to much, Chippy and Oatway battled in midfield, Mayo was taken apart by the opposing striker, we barely had a shot on goal. Pretty standard away game fare. The fact that the best player on the pitch was essentially an amateur footballer doesn’t say much for the standard of professional football in this division. The ref was almost prosser-like in his inability.
Sitting on the Thameslink on the way home, head in hands, I wondered why I do it. Why don’t I support a club who own their own stadium for one thing? I don’t know, Millwall or something?
Then I thought (as I find myself thinking after most away games) no. No, you made this decision years ago and you’re going to stick with it. It’s the thought that we might win the next game 4 nil even though all the evidence points to contrary. It’s the memory of Mayo blasting in that last minute winner against Derby last season. It’s the feeling I got when we thrashed Wolves last season, when we’d shown no signs of doing anything like it in the weeks before that game. It’s the scenes at Wycombe that make me remember why I do it. I support this club because the buzz when it goes right, when everything falls into place, when a Carpenter free kick does go into the net, that feeling is one of the best things in the world and no other team could replace that feeling. I’ve done too many years, I’ve seen too much of the rough, for anyone else to even compare.
See you at Port Vale!
Turkey said:What do people expect when we lose... Zamora, Brooker, Rodger, Blackwell, Barrett, Ingimarsson...
Easy 10 said:It pains me to say it, but I think there are some home truths that we have all got to accept, and learn to come to terms with over the coming weeks and months.
1. This is an average Division Two team which is simply not equipped for promotion, even in a very poor division. Leon has weighed in with a decent goals tally this season, but without him, we'd already be mid table or below. Too many players in the squad are now way, way past their sell-by, and I'm talking about Jones, Hart, Oatway, Carpenter, Mayo, Watson, Pethick. They're not going to get any better now. The Championship years are behind them, and they are no longer a force at this level. They don't even look up for it most weeks any more. I like the look of Virgo, El Abd and Robinson, but outside of them, the other youngsters are, at best average, and I'm talking about McPhee, Harding, Hammond and Marney. With the best will in the world, they are not just not going to be good enough to take us forward. The County League beckons for them I fear.
2. Expectations are basically too high. We've been spoilt for the last few years. Given the state the club is in, and the joke of a "stadium" we call a football ground, it is nothing short of a frigging miracle that we brought a season of First Division football there. That was achieved through a legendary goalscorer, and a rock solid defence. We had absolutely NO RIGHT to expect First Division football then, and to aspire to be a First Division club right now is simply unrealistic. Micky Adams was able to do a complete overhaul of the squad, which was desperately needed after finishing 91st two seasons running. The drain of playing at Withdean, and the Falmer application, means that McGhee is not in a position to do the same, and frankly, its not as urgent, as we are not in imminent danger of dropping into the Conference. People have got to be realistic and lower their expectations at the moment. Pointless moaning at McGhee, cos there's feck-all he can do about inheriting a sub-standard squad of players.
3. We are victims of our own success, and we've flattered to decieve. Frustration with the team and McGhee is building because we've had Division One football last season, and we managed to hit the top of the table early this season, but we're now witnessing it slowly slide away. Be honest. Can you recall even half a dozen really good performances this season ? Cos I can't. We've been good in fits and starts, maybe a half here and there. But I can barely recall a sustained performance where we've really played bloody well for 90 minutes. The odd game here and there where we've racked up a score (Wycombe, Blackpool, Grimsby), but the vast majority, and I'm talking 80% of the games this season, I'd say we've been pretty much piss poor. Thats because, basically, its not a very good team any more, and we have to accept that. Its only cos this division is so rubbish that we somehow find ourselves in 6th place.
As I said, I don't like saying it, but I think its been plain to see for a while now. I've accepted that right now, we are at the very best, an average Division Two club. We cannot expect any more than that unless, or until, we get Falmer. Anyone expecting anything better than that in the meantime is just deluding themselves. Like it or not, you'd better get used to rubbing shoulders with the likes of Brentford, Oldham Peterborough and Hartlepool, cos it AIN'T gonna get any better than that for a few years yet...if at all.
Learn to live with it - cos thats the reality my friends. If anyone can argue the toss on any of that and tell me I'm talking out of my arse, then step right up. But sadly, I think I am right on this one.
Titanic said:We seem to have 'lost' the real FDM and OGH this season too - and Watto sometime last season.
Play-off contention is fine by me; it would be really nice to make it, but not the end of the world if we don't.
This season is all about - anything else is a short-term sideshow.