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Well it's a bit inaccurate. The total population of Hull and East Yorkshire combined is only 600,000.
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Close to a million. I do know people who used to travel from over the bridge, so it would be rude to ignore them.

Quite a few people I know moved over the bridge to enjoy cheaper house pricing, particularly once they reduced the tolls.
 
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Close to a million. I do know people who used to travel from over the bridge, so it would be rude to ignore them.
You just confirmed my figures. Hull and East Riding population of about 600,000. Surely, you're not suggesting that Lincolnshire forms part of Hull City's catchment?
 
I'm sorry, but to include York,

You just confirmed my figures. Hull and East Riding population of about 600,000. Surely, you're not suggesting that Lincolnshire forms part of Hull City's catchment?

That's exactly what I'm saying. Why wouldn't it? I know of people that regularly travel from Grimsby and Scunthorpe. It's like saying we don't have any divisions of Manchester or Leeds United fans in our City <laugh>
 
Rubbish. As Castro's earlier post showed, we have NEVER had over 25,000 (on average) in the stadium. I've been reading this ****e for decades and remember how people said the KC was too small and we should build a stadium capable of holding 40,000. The most we can ever hope for is the most we have ever had. If we couldn't average more than 25,000 in our first season in the Prem than we never will.

We haven't currently got enough seats to average over 25,000.

The fact that cities smaller than ours can achieve crowds in excess of 30k mean it's obviously possible, all it takes is the right circumstances.
 
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That's exactly what I'm saying. Why wouldn't it? I know of people that regularly travel from Grimsby and Scunthorpe. It's like saying we don't have any divisions of Manchester or Leeds United fans in our City <laugh>
Well I can't agree. It's not the same. Our city is full of Man United, Liverpool and Leeds fans because of the fact that those clubs have had very successful histories at some point. Football fans in Grimsby and Scunthorpe are not going to support Hull City in any great number.
 
Norwich, too, perhaps.

No. Sparse, population around Norwich and Ipswich is close.

There are more people where Bournemouth are the nearest club. And Brighton.has a fair few.

Was in Devon in Sptember a couple of years ago and every pub in most towns were advertising rugby union games, the only football one they mentioned was one Plymouth were playing in.
 
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No. Sparse, population around Norwich and Ipswich is close.

There are more people where Bournemouth are the nearest club. And Brighton.has a fair few.

Was in Devon in Sptember a couple of years ago and every pub in most towns were advertising rugby union games, the only football one they mentioned was one Plymouth were playing in.
Look at the map; Norwich is almost as isolated as we are. 60 miles from Hull to Leeds; 48 from Norwich to Ipswich.
 
There's actually twice as many season ticket holders at City who live outside the Hull boundary and they're all over, Anlaby, Hessle, Cottingham, Beverley, all the West Hull villages, all the East Hull villages, Brid, Withernsea etc.

There are very few cities which have a single decent club within 30 miles, particularly in the Premier League, with a bit of sustained success and owners who didn't try and alienate the entire fan base, we could easily fill a 30k+ stadium.
Some of us are even in Wiltshire.
 
Maybe so, but I still don't see it as 'our' catchment area.

Brid was always part of the catchment area. When my dad went in Carter's day they used to have 20-30 coaches going from Brid and a supporters club with 1,500 members. I have seen up to 20 coaches on odd occasions in the 1960s and early 70s. This died out as people became better off and started going on the train. For a long time two extra trains used to go from Scarborough on match days. Quite a few Scarborough folk support City but few Middlesbrough despite it being virtually the same distance.
Still a fair few come on the train but increased car ownership and the advent of fans getting their kicks vicariously football wise instead of watching their nearest club have seen things alter.
 
Well I can't agree. It's not the same. Our city is full of Man United, Liverpool and Leeds fans because of the fact that those clubs have had very successful histories at some point. Football fans in Grimsby and Scunthorpe are not going to support Hull City in any great number.

You can't agree on something that is already happening? Wow. If we had sustainable Premier League football, we'd pull from everywhere within a 35-40 minute drive. I sit behind a Geordie at the KC who is a Newcastle fan, but lives locally and has had a ST with us for years, since BP days! The same will happen when new people move to the area for work in the renewable energy sector.
 
You can't agree on something that is already happening? Wow. If we had sustainable Premier League football, we'd pull from everywhere within a 35-40 minute drive. I sit behind a Geordie at the KC who is a Newcastle fan, but lives locally and has had a ST with us for years, since BP days! The same will happen when new people move to the area for work in the renewable energy sector.
I can accept that some people currently come to watch from Grimsby and Scunthorpe, but I can't accept that there is the potential there to provide the figures of 30,000+ that people are talking about.

Not sure what the relevance of the Newcastle fan is. As you say yourself, he lives locally. I used to watch Middlesbrough when I lived there.
 
Look at the map; Norwich is almost as isolated as we are. 60 miles from Hull to Leeds; 48 from Norwich to Ipswich.

You can be in Norfolk and be not much further from Leicester than Norwich.

One difference is Norfolk folk are unlikely to support a Suffolk team and vice versa but there are plenty of ****ers in Hull and East Yorks who support a bunch of Wessies.
 
I'm sorry, but I can't accept the idea that York is part of our catchment either.
Of course it is as is Lincolnshire.
I'd even go as far as including Holland and Belgium or anywhere near the NSF terminals.
A Premiership club in Hull playing from a stadium which was big enough to have plenty of seats to sell and were easy to buy would be a huge attraction.
To be a 'Premiership club' would mean of course spending more then a couple of seasons there and establishing ourselves.
 
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