West Hoathly Seagull
Honorary Ruffian
I dont like the history behind MK either but to be fair its a lovely stadium
Built by the builders of Falmer, the Buckingham Group (fixtures I know).
I dont like the history behind MK either but to be fair its a lovely stadium
I'm sure there are plenty of places to stay my point was that they weren't desirable! You live there so obviously know the area far better than me but my impression was that I would rather kill myself than live there. Having said that other than the harbour area Plymouth is also a soul destroying shithole so perhaps it was a prerequisite for bidding.
I dont like the way they did it but MK and Wimbeldon were talking about moving Wim'don FC since the 60's.
What a f**k-up that list is!
Sorry to all the apologists but to have Milton Keynes and, to a lesser extent, Plymouth makes me livid.
I thought England was "the home" of football yet we're desperate enough to have to include a stadium of a club who bought their place in the league and have never played in the top two divisions.
And Plymouth? What the hell are they going to do with a 46,000 stadium after the World Cup? They can barely get 10,000 for home games - it would be an even bigger white elephant than Darlington's new ground.
And as for whoever said they'd rather MK got a place than another London club, I'd prefer Orient, Millwall or whoever to get a place over a soulless, shitty place that didn't even exist when England last held the World Cup. Why not give the games to Telford, Crawley or Hemel Hempstead while we're at it?
Unless these two get left off the final list, an absolutely scandalous decision - yet should we have expected any better from the FA?
Can I just point out one VITAL piece of information that some on this thread seem to have forgotten:
We still need to win the right to host the World Cup (which we won't know whether we've got until next December) for any of this to matter.
Right, carry on....
What a f**k-up that list is!
Sorry to all the apologists but to have Milton Keynes and, to a lesser extent, Plymouth makes me livid.
I thought England was "the home" of football yet we're desperate enough to have to include a stadium of a club who bought their place in the league and have never played in the top two divisions.
And Plymouth? What the hell are they going to do with a 46,000 stadium after the World Cup? They can barely get 10,000 for home games - it would be an even bigger white elephant than Darlington's new ground.
And as for whoever said they'd rather MK got a place than another London club, I'd prefer Orient, Millwall or whoever to get a place over a soulless, shitty place that didn't even exist when England last held the World Cup. Why not give the games to Telford, Crawley or Hemel Hempstead while we're at it?
Unless these two get left off the final list, an absolutely scandalous decision - yet should we have expected any better from the FA?
Sometimes i really wish i lived in a country in whihc football wasnt the number 3 or 4 sport...
Yes, yes they did. There can't be more soul destroying towns than Gelsenkirchen across Western Europe. They completely rebuilt the Schalke Arena for the World Cup, but while Schalke were well supported, it must be noted that:Sorry to hark on but the principle of Milton Keynes potentially hosting World Cup games does matter. I've just seen that vile chairman of theirs pontificating on about how wonderful it is - it's not, it's an absolute travesty of an embarrassment for English football.
Did Germany give fixtures in 2006 to any tinpot clubs/places? No, all the cities had football tradition - something our FA wouldn't know if it kicked them in the balls.
Yes, yes they did. There can't be more soul destroying towns than Gelsenkirchen across Western Europe. They completely rebuilt the Schalke Arena for the World Cup, but while Schalke were well supported, it must be noted that:
a) Gelsenkirchen is less attractive and smaller than Croydon. What a shit place to have tourists coming through!
b) Gelsenkirchen is in that massive Rhine conurbation, which was already being served by 3 other stadiums, including Cologne and Dortmund.
c) Schalke football club were shithouse for 2 decades until the noughties, so the link with a successful storied club is tenuous.
You're right about MK's lack of football history, but it's a fast growing population centre, it's easy to get in and out of, and the facilities are top drawer. A tourist could be based in the Midlands or London and get to MK for the day with ease. Good location IMO.
OK, maybe they were resurgent in the late 90s, but what about the many many barren years? And Cologne is outside the area, but it really isn't far away, geographically speaking - which is why so many fans of all nationalities were based in that city.Schalke were shithouse until the noughties? It must have been another Schalke who won the UEFA Cup in 1997.
Gelsenkirchen may be an ugly place but the German FA chose it because of the love for the game there. The Ruhrgebiet is such a massive area that having two stadia there was quite understandable. Cologne is outside that area.
In that case you're missing the point of why the Alan Partridge comment was funny. The West Midlands and London are two absolutely massive population conurbations, and MK is easily accessible from both. In the context of watching a football match, I'd say that was highly relevant. Alan Partridge on the other hand was talking up Norwich's importance, unaware that it was only important specifically to him because he was turning into a provincial nobody, while clinging onto the forlorn belief that the national media in London was still relevant to his life.Milton Keynes' location between the Midlands and London? You're reminding me of Alan Partridge singing the praises of The Linton Travel Tavern's location equidistant between Norwich and London. If that's the best anyone can do, it's laughable.
Regardless of the merits of Milton Keynes's location I can't help but feel dissapointed that they'll be getting a W.C game if England wins its bid. To me it's the final seal of approval for the franchising of football clubs. I just find it sad.
An understandable feeling, but I'm not sure it's the reality. I don't think we'll ever see franchising again because of the ill feeling.Regardless of the merits of Milton Keynes's location I can't help but feel dissapointed that they'll be getting a W.C game if England wins its bid. To me it's the final seal of approval for the franchising of football clubs. I just find it sad.
An understandable feeling, but I'm not sure it's the reality. I don't think we'll ever see franchising again because of the ill feeling.
But in the meantime, MK is now a reality and IMO it would be churlish not to consider it solely on the grounds of there being no football culture in the city. It has too many other good points to offer.