A warm hello to all Potters fans⦠look, just to let you know weâve prepared a very detailed match presentation on the Reading v Stoke City game from our Reading forum, and the fullest respect shown to STOKE from our friendly site with full information produced equally for both sets of fans â but in all honesty far, far more on your team. It's here: http://royalsrendezvous.co.uk/topic/9675386/1 It would be really interesting for us now to have any comments from you, like how you see the game going and general thoughts on your own team, and your (honest!) opinion of Reading. Your user name and the âNot 606â Forum would always be cited for any small quote ⦠Thanks, daib0
Stoke City Official Site Blueprint For New Boys http://www.stokecityfc.com/news/article/griffin-interview-315193.aspx Griffin says Reading can learn from Stoke's success ANDY GRIFFIN is predicting a close battle when his two former clubs meet on Saturday . . . and believes newly-promoted Reading can take lessons in survival from their visitors. Stoke City kick off their fifth Premier League campaign when they take on the Royals at the Madejski Stadium, with the 33-year-old full-back insisting that the Pottersâ success so far can be the blueprint for promoted sides looking to make an impact in the top-flight. âI think a lot of teams can learn from Stoke City,â said Griffin. âTheyâve been extremely successful over the last five or six years â theyâve played in Europe, theyâve played in an FA Cup Final and theyâve established themselves in the Premier League. To see the players they have at the club now is wonderful. You only have to go back not so long ago and all this would have been unthinkable. Peter Coates has been good in the transfer market, kept faith in the manager and has been rewarded with regular Premier League football.â Griffin appreciates the challenges his former employers will face this weekend, though â he was released from Reading at the end of the last campaign, so is well-placed to judge their capabilities. He insists the atmosphere at the Madejski Stadium will reach fever-pitch come 3.00pm on Saturday afternoon as the new Premier League campaign gets underway, and that Brian McDermottâs team will be eager to fly out of the blocks in front of their own supporters. âItâs always difficult to go and play a newly-promoted team because thereâs an excitement all around the place, especially with the players theyâve brought in,â he stated. âA lot of the players will have something to prove, having not played Premier League football before. Theyâll want to show people theyâre good enough. Stoke are more or less an established team, though, and are very difficult to break down. I can see it going 1-0 either way, but I think if it was a draw then both teams would be happy.â The defender, who had three spells in the Potteries, is well aware that a fast start can fire the starter pistol on a productive campaign. He remembers fondly Cityâs 3-2 win over Aston Villa in their first top-flight game at the Britannia Stadium back in 2008, and insists that set them off on a sound footing. âI think it was huge. We lost to Bolton on the first day and most people had us down as certainties for relegation,â he added. âNewspapers were saying negative things, but then we played Villa and Ricardo Fuller scored that brilliant goal. The Britannia became this place where, whoever came, we were going to do it our own way and hopefully get the three points. Reading will need to make sure they get off to a similar start â if they can, I think they can have a good season and stay in the division.â As for Stokeâs prospects, Griffin thinks consolidating their status will be the main priority. âIn my eyes, if they stay up, then that will be another successful season,â he added. âI think sometimes you can become a victim of your own success. Tony Pulis will know he has to keep pushing and pushing and not take things for granted. Hopefully, they can have a good cup run, maybe winning one of them. As long as they stay in the league, though, thatâs the main thing. Tony will make sure complacency doesnât creep in.â In terms of his own career, Griffin is very much on the lookout for his next adventure. He admits he would have like to have tied something down sooner, but heâs remaining positive on his future. âIâm currently just working hard myself, being patient and hopefully the right club will come. Thereâs been contact with a few clubs, a couple of maybes, but they need to shift players on before they can get people in. Iâve just got to make sure Iâm in shape for when my chance comes.â
Depends what the book is really. I don't mind watching Stoke but if it's a really good book then definitely reading. Sorry.