... now now ... don't tempt me ... I might just morph into HAG (absent less than impressive trouser luggage) and embark on a meandering sojurn of stats, maps, rumours, mis-quotes and dubious fabric stains to convince everyone (OK perhaps just me) that the times they are indeed 'a changing'
Stoke is classed as being in the Midlands and must therefore be at the Northern apex ... in terms of South Midlands I played a bit of footie myself in the South Midlands League ... seemed to cover Beds, Bucks, Herts and Oxfordshire - none of which I had previously considered as being in the midlands ... Northampton and MK Dons are often mentioned as midlands teams - so i would presume that they represent the Southern extremities in terms of league football ... Further information is available from Google Maps
Is there a midmidlands? Useless fact you didn't want to know: the center of South Carolina is also called "The Midlands". We have the coast, the Pee-Dee, the Midlands and the Piedmont. The Midlands is the ugliest part of the state.
I played footy in a West Midlands Inter Service league (which we won), I was based in North Wales at the time. A bit like Swansea in the PL.
Stoke is North Midlands and Gloucester is South Midlands. I live just south of central Midlands, far enough Fixed
When I turn on Channel 3, I get Anglia And I don't want to be associated with leicester and Birmingham
How is that possible? Has plate tectonics caused Milton Keynes to move East 100+ miles since I left England? In 100 years Milton Keynes will be in Poland.
Like I said dude, when i turn on my TV, we get Anglia TV. Our weather forecast is told on the Anglia news.
Mk is in Buckinghamshire. Bucks Wiki: The County of Buckinghamshire is aceremonial county in South East England. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buckinghamshire
Well I do know that Milton Keynes was once part of Wales... So the whole traveling east thing has merit. I know it used to be part of Wales because our resident Welsh gentleman said this: