The atmosphere at Maine Road was excellent, scary place to go on night matches.
Really was mate, insane noise in there. Etihad was good atmosphere when it had 3 stands weirdly.
It’s a stunning stadium mind just has no heart.
The atmosphere at Maine Road was excellent, scary place to go on night matches.
Bloke on our bus got filled in before the 4-0 win 1980. He wasn't with the rest of us in a pub as he was with his 10 year old son and he wanted to have a look around before the game. ****ing cowards braying a bloke in front of his kid.The atmosphere at Maine Road was excellent, scary place to go on night matches.
Bloke on our bus got filled in before the 4-0 win 1980. He wasn't with the rest of us in a pub as he was with his 10 year old son and he wanted to have a look around before the game. ****ing cowards braying a bloke in front of his kid.
Moss Side was rough as ****.I was at that match, very edgy all night.
I used to live on Crondall Street. Right near Maine Road. I couldn’t put my shopping in my pockets because they were full of spanners.Moss Side was rough as ****.
One more Liverpool goal at Man City and the ground will empty ...
... that's becoming the norm and they've won everything.
I agree with this, the away support is exactly that, getting behind the team regardless with loads of noise, whereas the home support is so quiet unless a goal is scored. I sit in row 10 of the North Stand and hear the away support getting behind their team just like we do away (in less numbers obviously).I'm sure we all know the answer but don't like to say or admit it to ourselves.
The away support and the home support are entirely different.
One puts in considerable time, money and effort so is totally invested in the club, often going into a hostile environment along with the players.
The other pops along to the entertainment, sits on their hands and leaves early to 'beat the traffic'.
The away support has had many more knocks, this season, at far flung places like Stoke, Plymouth, Watford, but still keep selling out, cheering the players and have never, to my knowledge, booed the players off the pitch. Everyone packed into the away section is 'in it together' and that includes the players.
The home crowd get in cheap, take bored kids playing on their phones, whinge about the catering, queue for pints but moan about the quality and are there to be entertained. Those who don't sing and cheer are spread out amongst those who do which dilutes the atmosphere. I usually sit in the East Stand and have actually had people turn round and frown when I've blasted out a big HA'WAY!!! ...
... because the stadium is often quiet the bigmouth moaners, and 'amateur experts', can be easily heard which, again, dilutes the atmosphere.
At Roker Park the crowd would encourage the players, now it's usually the other way round. We didn't need orchestrated singing and pre-match entertainment. An hour before the game the young 'non drinking' lads would get into the centre of the Fulwell and start to wind up the atmosphere. Before the players even came out they'd have heard the noise from the dressing room, then the place would start filling up ... it always seemed full even when it wasn't and people would sing.
The current pre-match music is fine but it actually kills the real atmosphere in my opinion.
I can't wait to cheer the players onto the pitch at Hillsborough. Anyone watching will see what support is, the TV cameras will mention us and the players will come over to the away end at the final whistle. Just imagine if the SOL was always like that.
