I believe you. Really. What do you want to be when you grow up?
I believe you. Really. What do you want to be when you grow up?
Did your maths at school explain that if 99.5% of the seats are sold but only 96% of the people who bought turn up there will be a lot of empty seats?
City sold the most tickets they have ever sold for a league match, 55,000 for a Christmas Day game against Rotherham, but there was a transport strike and 49,000 went through the gates. (You have to wonder what would happen now. A lot would either not get there - not many had a car then-' or be leaving at half time as they need to leave 10 minutes early to get home in a car so heaven know what time they would want to leave if walking).
Carmine Galante:6526810 said:The way some people on this board arse lick everything that is Sunderland you'd be forgiven for thinking they actually support them.
Not as well supported as they( and some on here) think.
And they're a set of absolute ****s.
The way some people on this board arse lick everything that is Sunderland you'd be forgiven for thinking they actually support them.
Not as well supported as they( and some on here) think.
And they're a set of absolute ****s.
42,500 v Millwall Boxing Day 1965.....And that f**kwit Brooking asked why we needed a 25k stadium....When we beat West Ham in mid 70s n the FAC there was 32,000 there you muppet
So, averaging 37,000 in a city with a smaller population than ours is not very good?
42,500 v Millwall Boxing Day 1965.....And that f**kwit Brooking asked why we needed a 25k stadium....When we beat West Ham in mid 70s n the FAC there was 32,000 there you muppet
We didn't have a crowd of 25,000 for a league game after 1972/3 season to be honest. Bolton Wanderers had 50,000 for a Cup game later than our West Ham one but wouldn't have considered a bigger capacity when the built there new stadium based on that.
We would have got over 25,000 for a few league games after 72/73 if the ground had been big enough to allow fans to pay on the day and not fart about buying tickets days in advance. The Scarbourgh match in the old 4th division is an example. Two teams at the bottom of the Football League ladder and we could have had well over 25,000 in that day with no trouble.
I doubt if there are too many teams in the Football League who could attract a crowd like that if their fans had put up with 20 years and more of utter ****e beforehand like we had.
The capacity argument is flawed when Boothferry Park had its capacity reduced to such an extent that actually getting anyone in the ground became a problem. FFS at one stage the club/police even stopped fans entering and leaving the ground from Boothferry Road. They had us entering the ground via a ****ing ten foot. North Ferriby had better access then that!
The East Stand was membership only for god knows how long and even that was restricted to about 250.
Prob counting all passes as sold whether people attend or not
Exactly, which makes the survey utterly pointless!
So, averaging 37,000 in a city with a smaller population than ours is not very good?
So those clubs we're told have better supporters and who always fill their grounds, even for a friendly, and their cities/communities get behind them better....aren't quite what they were claimed to be?
I'm shocked.
You do no Sunderland has the highest percentage of town population as an average attendance?