The39thStep
Urban critical thinker
Does anyone fancy a Qatar owned Man Utd doing the treble?
Maybe it's because you all come on a City thread to talk about a wider problem instead of doing what somebody suggested the other day and starting a thread to discuss those wider issues.No, the point is not to 'blame' City. You do seem to have a persecution complex. I am well aware of Utd's crap spending. Grealish's wages are a pretty open secret, if you think they are secret at all.
But you're in denial about City's contribution to the spiral. To the point of defending "successful Arabs". And I had some idea you were into class politics. So it kinda makes you look very silly in my eyes. I'm sure you'll live with it. Reflected glory sure helps eh?
And City's recruitment and transfer policy is probably the best in the EPL tbh .Klopp calls Guardiola the best in the world.
I'm really not that arsed about what has happened - it's not really the City I cared about, the same way it's increasingly not Man United any more, and not football as I knew it etc etc - but it does annoy me when City/Newcastle fans try and deny the situation and start with the mental gymnastics. your owners are terrible; they're incredibly rich; they've spent loads of money - it is what it is, just own it.
Funny how many Manyoo fans have 'lost interest' over the past decade. The 'interest' that so many of them discovered in the 1993-2014 period or thereabouts. None of these are 'bothered about City', however...club with unlimited money in being able to get good people shocker
it's a good point and another obvious distinction (to most people at least) to what has happened at United, say - Old Trafford is falling apart and Glazers have invested bugger all in the wider club. instead we just get big-name signings piled on to the club's growing debt to paper over the cracks.
I'm really not that arsed about what has happened - it's not really the City I cared about, the same way it's increasingly not Man United any more, and not football as I knew it etc etc - but it does annoy me when City/Newcastle fans try and deny the situation and start with the mental gymnastics. your owners are terrible; they're incredibly rich; they've spent loads of money - it is what it is, just own it.
It's not just the cash though is it ? Chelsea and Man Utd have the cash but a lot of their expensive signings haven't been value.club with unlimited money in being able to get good people shocker
it's a good point and another obvious distinction (to most people at least) to what has happened at United, say - Old Trafford is falling apart and Glazers have invested bugger all in the wider club. instead we just get big-name signings piled on to the club's growing debt to paper over the cracks.
I'm really not that arsed about what has happened - it's not really the City I cared about, the same way it's increasingly not Man United any more, and not football as I knew it etc etc - but it does annoy me when City/Newcastle fans try and deny the situation and start with the mental gymnastics. your owners are terrible; they're incredibly rich; they've spent loads of money - it is what it is, just own it.
It's for exactly the same reason that the overwhelming majority of fans of your club would do it.and I get that it's hard. I know a Newcastle fan who is a very socially aware, left-wing guy, often quite vocal about politics etc on social media... but he has been 100% positive about the owners and 'the new Newcastle' despite being well aware of the problems. football is so tribal and means so much to people that it can be easy to turn a blind eye, unfortunately.
Exactly. The average football fan couldn't give a flying toss about what happens in the Middle East or anywhere else in the world.I agree with this but I think the flipside is that all this stuff tends to reduce any criticism to the pointless 'footy bantz' sort of level. A lot of it is just 'yeah but your owners are bad so ner' sort of stuff from people who don't give a shit what these governments get up to otherwise and anything a bit sharper gets lost amongst all of that pointless crap. Part of how effective it is I suppose.
I take your point about the way the Glaziers have run the club and tbh I can't understand how in reality a club that is in so much debt hasn't faced any investigation whilst Championship clubs have been sanctioned for FFP.well, two things.
they have and they haven't got the cash. United is saddled with debt. the owners just take money out. not remotely the same.
and that was my whole point about no investment in the wider club - expensive signings is only one thing, there is the wider structure of the club, people, facilities etc.
And yet, as pointed out somewhere above, even the minority of United fans who are vocally opposed to the Glazers simultaneously revere the old-guard hierarchy who backed the Glazers' buy-out and defended it every step of the way.well, two things.
they have and they haven't got the cash. United is saddled with debt. the owners just take money out. not remotely the same.
and that was my whole point about no investment in the wider club - expensive signings is only one thing, there is the wider structure of the club, people, facilities etc.
eh? FFP is about not spending more than you earn. not an issue for United.I take your point about the way the Glaziers have run the club and tbh I can't understand how in reality a club that is in so much debt hasn't faced any investigation whilst Championship clubs have been sanctioned for FFP.
That was the original idea of FFP. Google what Platini had to say about how the European clubs with clout pressured UEFA into making their FFP mainly about restricting new investment.eh? FFP is about not spending more than you earn. not an issue for United.
It was initially sold as sustainability, a sensible way of financially running a club.eh? FFP is about not spending more than you earn. not an issue for United.
It would disgust me as much as it did to witness a state owned Man City win the treble.Does anyone fancy a Qatar owned Man Utd doing the treble?
Exactly that. I could respect anyone who is a longstanding City fan who felt conflicted when Abu Dhabi took over. Something like 'yeah, it feels wrong, it's a gruesome regime and it's obvious why they are buying a team but sheesh, it's just hard to thrown off your loyalties'. It's okay to have that conflict and if you want to carry on supporting City, that's your call. But building elaborate justifications, attacking journalists and all the rest... less so.You've really become quite unhinged in your blind support for your team. Any writer who dares criticise them or their dodgy owners is immediately dismissed as a hack or a worthless troll, and you're unable to take on board - or even comprehend - why football fans may be deeply alarmed at the worrying precedent Man City are setting.
But so long as they're lifting trophies, then that's all your interested in.
You're unable to grasp the concept that you can support a team while still being deeply critical of their owners, their funding or the wildly uneven playing field they're created with the near-unlimited wealth of their backers. And you can't even see why all this is bad for football in the first place.
Not all. Some decided to put their money where their mouth is and went on to form FC Utd of Manchester.And yet, as pointed out somewhere above, even the minority of United fans who are vocally opposed to the Glazers simultaneously revere the old-guard hierarchy who backed the Glazers' buy-out and defended it every step of the way.
A tiny minority of the fan base did, but some of those known to me used to still watch, or at least follow, both clubs, and I don't think that was particularly unusual.Not all. Some decided to put their money where their mouth is and went on to form FC Utd of Manchester.
Home | FC United of Manchester
FC United exists to provide affordable, supporter-owned, community-focused football for supporters who are tired of modern football's constant pursuit of further riches at the expense the fans.fc-utd.co.uk
I didn't say their attendances had fallen, I said you seem to meet, or hear plenty saying, that they've lost interest in the club. But such people are probably not regular match-going fans.
Hahahahha. That last line is great.Corbyn's plans to adopt a Bundesliga type plan for football clubs would have been a step forward but predictably it was met with this sort of media response
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Supporting fan owned clubs - as I do - isn't going to solve shitty corporate football and it's not for everyone. But it is a way of watching football and keeping your principles (roughly) in tact.A tiny minority of the fan base did, but some of those known to me used to still watch, or at least follow, both clubs, and I don't think that was particularly unusual.
I haven't noticed FCU for a few years now, but the last I heard there were embroiled in infighting, over the money I seem to recall.
Did FCU resolve the issues that were tearing the club apart a few seasons ago? They no longer seem to attract much media interest. I didn't follow it in detail, but I remember reports of boardroom infighting, questions over cash, anger-fuelled general meetings (or whatever they call them) and, unless I imagined it, a pitch invasion in protest at the ownership.Supporting fan owned clubs - as I do - isn't going to solve shitty corporate football and it's not for everyone. But it is a way of watching football and keeping your principles (roughly) in tact.
I felt conflicted, I must admit, as having seen too many disappointing and downright incompetent owners at the club, I feared this lot would be similar for all their talk. They have proved my fears unfounded, and I'm ashamed of my initial misgivings.Exactly that. I could respect anyone who is a longstanding City fan who felt conflicted when Abu Dhabi took over. Something like 'yeah, it feels wrong, it's a gruesome regime and it's obvious why they are buying a team but sheesh, it's just hard to thrown off your loyalties'. It's okay to have that conflict and if you want to carry on supporting City, that's your call. But building elaborate justifications, attacking journalists and all the rest... less so.
I'm still a United fan, but have no problem saying the management and ownership of the club has been deeply problematic going back to Louis Edwards. For me the breaking point was the Glazers and I've not been to the ground since they took over. So, I've been stuck at being a fan of the team, but not a supporter of the 'club' since 2005. But if United end up as a Qatari project, fuck the whole lot of 'em.