Just go onto the you tube channel and put in the CL Final and it should come up ! Not sure how it works over there ! But it works here !
Thanks TC. I'll try the cricfree.stream via BT 2. DAZN won't even let me sign on for their free trial so I've given up on that. Good luck with getting it to work tomorrow. Let me know if you get on. If I don't hear from you again I'll know you're dangling at the end of a rope. Its been nice knowing you. we'll miss you next season.
Last nights build up shows for the big match (off the BT Youtube site). You'll need a VPN to pretend you're in the UK however. To help you & your good lady get into the mood for tomorrow.
I screened it from my phone to my TV via my fire stick and the picture was as good as SKY or terrestrial channels HD. Only later did it occur to me I could have done it direct on my TV.
Does anyone know why Spurs fans nowadays sing a slowed down version of a song associated with Southampton when in their glory years in the early 1960s their song was Glory, Glory, Hallelujah!? Is it because .TWS started entering the field to it before they started using the annual car test song?
Southampton used it in the 50's. https://tui.fansnetwork.co.uk/news/17157/oh-when-the-saints-is-not-a-spurs-song-!
Some pre final triv. How many players have played for both clubs? I've got: Murphy, Ruddock, Paul Stewart, Paul Walsh?, Clemence, Any more?
Southampton sung When The Saints Go Marching In For decades. If you were old enough to have seen Spurs playing in Europe in the early 1960s on TV, a rare treat in those virtually football free days, you would have heard games played out to a deafening background of Glory, Glory, Hallelujah. . "Glory, Glory, Hallelujah" became a popular song amongst Tottenham fans in the early 1960s and is still an anthem for the club today. Although it may have been sung before by their fans, the popular use of the tune by Tottenham Hotspur began in September 1961 during the 1961–62 European Cup in the home match against the Polish side Górnik Zabrze. The Polish press had previously described the Spurs team as "no angels" due to their rough tackling during the away match. In the return leg at White Hart Lane, some fans then dressed themselves in angel costumes at the match holding placards with slogans such as 'Glory be to shining White Hart Lane' and 'Rejoice! This is the night of vengeance'. The crowded started singing the refrain "Glory Glory Hallelujah" when Spurs beat the Poles 8–1, and in so doing starting the tradition at Tottenham.[4] Then they dropped it and started using Southampton’s song. As I asked in my original post, does anyone know why?
Some of us are old enough to remember it, which is why I asked. It seems some who don’t know try and point score without knowing the facts. Talking of songs, Charlton Athletic used to come out to the tune of the Red, Red, Robin long before HKR did. Don’t know why as though The Robins were the nickname of another club, it wasn't Charlton’s.