Avatar MIA wrote: » That was mocking you (I assumed clearly). Do keep up mo chara :pac:
Maurice Yeltsin wrote: » Bury, Oldham, Rochdale and Stockport are comparatively ****e. In a county with a population half of that of Ireland and with four giants within spitting distance they get more through the gates than the whole LOI. Four small teams that share a city with two of the biggest teams in the world get more in the gate of any of the big three Dublin clubs. Tens of thousands through the gates at eternal non achievers in the London area (Crystal Palace, Millwall, West Ham, Brentford, Leyton, Southend, Charlton Athletic, Luton, Crawley, AFC Wimbledon, QPR, Fulham) when the easy option would be to fob these off in favour of Chelsea and, to a lesser extent, Spurs and Arsenal. It's a cultural problem in this country more than anything. We are event junkies. Kids today wouldn't believe that until 18 or so years ago very few people outside of South east Dublin and Limerick cared for the rugby side.
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » I just could never get why most of Dublin and the rest of the country supported the English league .
Alf Veedersane wrote: » More exposure to English teams. No LOI teams near where I'm from so no exposure to them and no connection. Only football I saw was Irish matches and English football on ITV so you'd pick a team and follow then in your formative years.
Maurice Yeltsin wrote: » Bury, Oldham, Rochdale and Stockport are comparatively ****e. In a county with a population half of that of Ireland and with four giants within spitting distance they get more through the gates than the whole LOI. Four small teams that share a city with two of the biggest teams in the world get more in the gate of any of the big three Dublin clubs.
OldMrBrennan83 wrote: » No, it's barely a sport when you look at the actual skills involved.
Perifect wrote: » There's an excuse when you're a child. Grown adults? It's sad.
Perifect wrote: » Fail! Backtracking with your tail between your legs.
Tommy Kelly wrote: » Loads of people support counties different to the counties they are from. Go to a Galway Hurling match, let it be an inter-county match or the Galway county final and you'll see people there from Roscommon, leitrim, Mayo, Sligo etc. Some of them are well known to hardly ever miss a match and could teach some local lads a thing or two about Galway hurling in the days gone by. Same story around the country. You're talking out of your arse.
Avatar MIA wrote: » The pay is quite decent for the elite level, you should go to your province team and tell them you've decided to tog out for them. That you've seen games on tv and would like to show where they can improve. And yet in the next sentence you infer the rules are difficult :rolleyes:
Omackeral wrote: » And they'd support them over their own county would they? I'm not on about going along to a cup final and lending support. Straight up supporting a county you've nothing to do with over your own one? Have to say I've never heard of that myself so maybe it's you talking out of your hoop...
OldMrBrennan83 wrote: » I said most of the daytrippers (and rugby is the biggest array of these) neither know nor care what's going on. So long as they get the selfie.
Avatar MIA wrote: » Ah, apologies. I thought you had a clue about what you were talking about. Rugby has been criticised for being too technical with complex rules and I thought you were saying that the supporters didn't understand what was going on. My crime? Over estimating you
Alf Veedersane wrote: » If you've spent 10+ years watching an English team you're supposed to just stop and follow an Irish team when you become a 'grown adult'? Why? And why is it sad to follow and English team instead of an Irish one?
OldMrBrennan83 wrote: » They don't care what's going on.
Avatar MIA wrote: » Okay, when I mock you in future I'll try to be more obvious
Perifect wrote: » You don't have to watch an Irish team. Surely the realisation that you are following a team that you have no connection with hits you? For most, they've barely ever been in the city or town of the team they are following. As a child it's excusable, an adult, not really.
8-10 wrote: » Who's they? 100% of the people watching? You're generalising a lot to diminish the sport because it doesn't fit with your narrative of wanting to bash Irish people who support British clubs. When it's pointed out that attendances at rugby games in the Pro 14 v English Premiership is comparable and the Irish teams are better supported than some of the British ones you change tact to try and downplay the sport. I think it's clear who here doesn't understand rugby....
Alf Veedersane wrote: » So if you're from anywhere in the country that doesn't have a LOI team, you support no one because you won't have a connection with any other team That's some strange logic. It's still possible to enjoy football without having a connection.
8-10 wrote: » I suppose the same lads only support RTE and Irish funded TV productions and don't go near British programming
Alf Veedersane wrote: » It's still possible to enjoy football without having a connection.
Omackeral wrote: » Daft comparison. Utterly daft. Who "supports" RTE?
Omackeral wrote: » I honest to god saw a fella squaring up to the ref (on the telly) before. Honest to god. Was a Man United match also as it happens. His mates telling him to leave it. Just mind boggling.