Blades Footy Scarves

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Cerberus Blade

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Just wondering how many folks out there actually wear a Blades footy scarf - and how you wear it?

When I first started watching football in the early 70's the football scarf was an essential bit of kit. Just about everybody wore one. Fans would hold them aloft at the start of the game to create a barrier of colour showing their support for the team. It was pretty impressive to see.

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I remember a Sheffield derby at Hillsboro' in that period. I was on the Leppings Lane end. As the atmosphere started to build before kick-off, the roofless East Bank Kop erupted in a sea of blue and white scarves - then, all of a sudden, there were all these red and white scarves popping up all over the East Bank Kop. Blades fans had infiltrated and were everywhere on that Kop as well. It was brilliant to see such insurgency from our fans. And the scarf, of course, was the symbol of that.

Depending on your age, you would wear your scarf differently. The old blokes from that era, ones that we used to refer to as "flat-caps", wore their scarf in the traditional manner, like this.


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Just draped around the neck and hanging down.

But us youngsters of the 70's had to worry about our "street cred". And there were two different ways of wearing a scarf for us, neither of which involved wrapping it around your neck! Like this:

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I don't have a picture of real Blades fans with red and white scarves, but this cartoon makes the point. The scarf was either tied to the wrist, or worn through the belt loop of the trousers.

At some point later in the 1970's, it became a bit naff to tie a scarf to your wrist and I think they found their rightful place around the neck again. But, we would still differentiate ourselves from the flat caps, because we didn't just let it drape down idly on either side. We tied it in a proper knot like this:

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(True Blade that bloke in the photo!)

In the years that have followed the popularity of scarves amongst football fans seems to have diminished. It's not so common now to see them held aloft at games to show a wall of colour and support for your team. I think that's a real shame. One exception to this is Leeds United. (Sorry to mention those words on here!). But when we played them at Elland Road last season I thought the display of support for their team, using scarves, was very impressive. All sides of the ground (except for our bit of course) waved the white, yellow and blue scarves when their team came out onto the pitch - it was quite an amazing and unusual sight in today's football. Reminded me so much of the atmospheric 70's and imo it really adds some spice to the game. See what I mean in the short video clip below?



I suppose it was helped enormously though by the club giving away 30,000 free scarves to their fans! What a gesture that was!

I wish scarves would make a comeback, big style, for our club. There is no better time to do it than now - whilst we are plying our trade at the very top level of world football. (I feel like typing that last bit again, because I'm still coming to terms with it, "whilst we are plying our trade at the very top level of world football". Nope! Still not sunk in!). 🤔

As to how I'd wear mine...I'm not sure. I know how I wouldn't wear it though, I wouldn't wear it like many blokes seem to wear their scarves thesedays. This "trendy" loop knot.

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Also known as the "Hoxton knot", "Chelsea knot", "Parisian loop", "French loop" on "Snug Tug". Popularised by fashionista's like David Beckham, this is a scourge on our society imo. It cries out, "look at me, I think I'm trendy" when in fact, what it's really saying is, "look at me, I'm copying everybody else". What's even funnier is that a lot of the time, the scarf is too short to tie it in this way, so they end up with a little bit of a woolly stump sticking up! :D yet they think they look "cool" in it.

Nah...I think I might buy myself a new Blades scarf (unless someone in here is ITK and can tell us that the Chairman is going to give us free ones like Leeds did?). I might even go back to tying it to my wrist and digging out my old Doc Marten's as well. Then again, I might not. But, I would like to see the football scarf make a comeback. Any takers?
 

A few years ago we played villa, 3 nil loss, I was in the holte end, we were all given a free villa scarf and they whirled them around there heads. Very coriagraphed (sp) I couldn't see much through the scarfs. Not sure it would have look intimidating.
 
Cold and miserable match day weather seems appropriate from memory. Sometimes get the sun going down low and having to shade your eyes with your hand.
I have, (somewhere) an old blades scarf with longitudinal stripes which I wore as per MP, in a muffler of cravat style knot. Just to keep warm.
My Thai bird crocheted a black red and white one, for each of my three lads.
My sister in law was a well travelled supporter, who had a heated mitten hand warmer when she joined us for winter games.
 
Had a junior blades scarf which would have been early eighties. The silk one with the bloke with a cricket bat shaped head on it. No idea looking back who that was supposed to symbolise. Anyway always tied it round the wrist on match day and had another wooly one round my neck for good measure.

Proper blades always wore 2 scarves so there 😀
 
Had a junior blades scarf which would have been early eighties. The silk one with the bloke with a cricket bat shaped head on it. No idea looking back who that was supposed to symbolise. Anyway always tied it round the wrist on match day and had another wooly one round my neck for good measure.

Proper blades always wore 2 scarves so there 😀
That could be Bertie Blade. He was a knife, used to make them round here.
 
Anyone else have a really long one..... scarf you lot, scarf ! I knitted myself an 8 footer, was leaving the rust bucket after a 1-1 draw, can’t remember when but I guess 1970ish. A Wed@@@@@@y supported tried to steal it by pulling it off from behind me and got the shock of his life when I turned and held on to the “spare” 6 feet or so
 

The only scarf I ever had was one of the silk ones in the early 70's. Wore it down the side of my leg like the second chap in the drawing. Seem to remember that all the girls wore their Bay City Rollers scarfs in the same way.
 
Agree I remember the 70’s......the scarf was a compulsory piece of kit...I had the wool red, white and black striped scarf
The only ones that tended not to wear scarfs are when you were either looking for trouble (hooliganism)
or you planned to stand amongst the opposition fans and wanted to remain undercover.

I was explaining the other day that any fan could rock up to an away fixture (without a ticket) and always get in.
Away fans would generally try to pay on the turnstyle at the away end but if that was full or your preferred a change
Quite a lot of away fans would normally sit or stand in the side areas of a stadium.

Imagine that.....every away fixture being available to Blades fans....no priority points needed.
Even when we played Rotherham or Sheff Wed...if the away ends were full you’d just go into other parts of the ground.

Back on topic the scarf was about publicly showing your allegiance.
These days the “football shirt” has now replaced the scarf.
Although some clubs (Leeds and Leicester) have had events where a free scarf has been place on every seat.
Looks quite impressive (if contrived) on tv when every single person in a stand is waving a scarf.
 
Do you know whereabouts in town? I must buy one as a momento of this prestigious occasion. That’s what we all do isnt it?

I'll give you one for free (fnarr fnarr)

My mate blagged one off a street seller outside OT after the cup game a few years ago. It was chucking it down and noone was interested in stopping to buy such things after the game.

He gave it my son and needless to say it hasnt seen the light of day since.
 
The final picture is simply the easiest and most comfortable way to wear a scarf. It hasn't been 'trendy' for more than a decade. The only other alternative is to simply wind it around your neck, but that's not as comfortable. All of the other suggestions look daft.
 
It was the way to show your colours 30 odd years ago , but that was the time before it became common to wear the club shirts
 
Think my dogs played tug-o-war with the last one I owned?
 

I still wear a woollen scarf. Held aloft over my head whilst belting out the GCB at the start of the game, then back around my gregory just like Michael Palin wears his Barnstoneworth colours.
I had a silk 'Tony Currie' scarf back in the 70's that I wore around my wrist. Don't know what became of it, but think it was Christmas gift to all junior supporters that had joined EDS.
5 house points to anyone that remembers EDS, and what the acronym stood for?
 

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