- Location
- Somewhere wet & hilly in NW England.
You see, I agree with their not being had off by their owners; the TV deal coming in means that the money handed over by the supporters to Premier league clubs is neither here nor there.
But then they dress it up with stuff like this, in The Guardian:
Today felt like a flag had been planted, and maybe things will never be the same again. I expected sadness but there was mainly stoic pride. The Kop, defiantly mute for an hour, roused itself with trademark angry majesty on 75 minutes and cheered the faithful home. Never so literally.
Come on, chaps, you walked out of a football match a few minutes early, you didn't witness the Second Coming (or your team chucking away a two goal lead).
Standard media speak for all things Kop - a club that is enshrouded by memories of yesteryear and mawkish sentimentality. If someone's Staffy dies it's time to break out the black arm bands.
Quite why the media pander to it is beyond me - even a couple of weeks ago the media were pitching LFC vs MUFC as the 'biggest club game on the planet'. What a load of rollocks. The nodding dogs in the Northern biased punditry teams were salivating at the prospect and fervently agreeing. Risible.
Saying that - I do get where the fans were coming from yesterday. Ticket prices are absurd for 90 minutes of entertainment. Ditto for the prices charged for food/drink/programmes at the grounds.
The big negative I have about the game is the astronomical amount of money that ends up in the clubs, managers and players pockets and the continual screwing every last drop out of the fans - oops, sorry I forgot they are now customers according to LFC's owners. Whether by the clubs themselves or Sky/BT it is a constant round of how much more can we take out of the game.
So, not my favourite club, but good for them (notwithstanding the Guardians overly sentimental prose).