As sad as Mr Bloomfields circumstances are a nice reminder on our site that heâs not the only fan going through a tough situation at the moment.
http://www.qpr.co.uk/news/article/2...inally-ill-qpr-fan-alfie-preston-1571085.aspx
Should we not have a clap in the 66th minute?
A very close friend of mine in his 20âs who is an absolute Rangers nut has been diagnosied this week with an incurable life altering and debilitating illness.
So as sad as it is. I donât see why Mtr Bloomfield is more important. My mates is 25 should everyone have a clap for him in the 25th minute??!! (Iâm in no way proposing either of these,as the rest of my comments will indicate)
As a wider point I believe this type of thing has gone too far in football and that every club is a competition to prove they are the âbestâ fans. A way of doing this by proving their class. And a perceived way of doing this seems to be, by how sympathetic they can be too vaguely football linked causes thus giving them an inflated sense of importance of their own club.
While each of these circumstances are individually tragic, the frequency of this devalues it all in my opinion.
Alan Davies the well known intelligent and respected comedian highlighted this same issue with Liverpool. They refused to move a game to an anniversary date of the Hillsborough disaster and he pointed out how far do you take thisâ¦
âDo they play on the date of the Heysel Stadium disaster? How many dates do they not play on? Do Man Utd play on the date of Munich? Do Rangers play on the date when all their fans died in that disaster, whatever year that was â 1971?"
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/fo...usal-to-play-on-Hillsborough-anniversary.html
Now I stress all these events are individually tragic but it irks me how it seems to be that some are deemed more important than others and the cynic in me links this to fans wanting to give their club an elevated sense of worth. So the mourning/respect is not as genuinely heartfelt as it should be thus devaluing the whole thing.
I think what our club has done is far more appropriate and classy. This enforced, peer pressure mourning and respect for this one individual above all others isnât fair in my opinion. Sub-consciously I genuinely believe the Derby fans (not directly affected /friends or related to the unfortunate terminally ill fan) are more pleased at the fact that when the millions of people tuning in as neutrals tomorrow go, âwhy is everyone suddenly clappingâ and they find out, they think oh arenât âDerby fans greatâ.
Article from the Daily Mash highlights how the enforced and regular mourning has got out of hand in football and this supports my sentiments.
http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/sport...datory-for-all-premiership-kits-2012123154666
Iâm not sure who decides this hierarchy of what tragedy is more important than the next one and I will be respecting the clap in the 31st minute but for me on a personal level there are far more relevant unfortunate situations that are pertinent to me and the latest article on the club website is a reminder that this type of thing unfortunately isnât as uncommon as we would hope that it was.