having being a football fan (SUFC) since 1988 my view my be blurry eyed and I'm sure everything wasn't great back in the day, maybe it's an age thing cos I remember my old man saying how great the Currie, Woodward, Badger, Hockey, Coloughin (sp) era was, but I'm sure modern football has become a rather dull and pretty laborious spectical.
I love the club I support and find the match day experience almost addictive, away days can be a time to behold, regular faces from years gone and a newer element coming through, it's a great environment to be in.
HOWEVER........We're supporting a modern day footballer with little or no loyalty to our city or club, a job description which must include the word "mercenaries" within it as 99% are. I've experienced my life's highest and lowest points following the Blades (bar the birth of my kids) however the first round of the FA Cup (esp. the raise of Salford City) conjures up memories of how it used to be and what football at grass roots means to communities, surely that's what football is meant to be all about. I saw a tweet from Ryan Hindley that Hallams crowds are up 52% year on year, a coincidence that Swfc have increased admission fees to a level beyond the reach of some?
I suppose my question is am I (at 38yrs old) an ageing nostalgic fool or is there some underlying movement of disgruntled football purists and is modern football really rubbish?
Interesting thread and debate, along the lines of the "sky's ruined football" thread last week.
I've been watching United and football since 1991 (I was 6).
I'm as just as obsessed about the game now, if not more, than I have ever been. I watched 4 live games this weekend - Man United vs West Brom, Arsenal vs Tottenham, Man City vs Villa, FC Dallas vs Sounders, plus all the premier league highlights and some FA Cup goals. I live in the States, so think all the T.V. coverage is brilliant, without it I wouldn't get to see a game. I love all the coverage, analysis, pod casts. I watch and listen to those that are good i.e. BBC 5 Live, Sky Sports Gary Neville, Football Weekly, and ignore those that are shit i.e. Steve Claridge and Robbie Savage! Some games are boring, some are brilliant, and for me there is as much excitement in the game as there was in 1991.
This notion that small clubs can no longer get in the Premier League or get success is garbage. Over the past decade we've seen Wigan get up there and stay, Hull have two stints, Blackpool in there, little Burnley twice, Bournemouth, Cardiff, Swansea and Stoke both got in there on small budgest and are established etc etc. We've seen smaller clubs get to more Cup Finals and Semi's in the past decade then we probably saw in the 90's i.e. Cardiff, Bradford, Wigan, Millwall have all been in Finals, and there have been countless "smaller" clubs in Semi's.
In terms of the Premier League there are realistically 4 teams that can win it Chelsea, Man United, Arsenal, Man City... and Liverpool were close the other year, Spurs may even come close in the next few years. Again, better than the mid to late 80's when it was essentially Liverpool or Everton. yeah we'll never see a Leeds situation like in 1992, but aside from that it was just Man United and Arsenal for all of the 90's, aside from when Blackburn bought it, so it would appear that "modern" football is more competitive at the top level than it was 30-20 years ago.
Look a little further down - due to the money in the premier league we have now we have seen the gap close. Leicester, Southampton, West Ham and Palace all upsetting the big boys near the top. Even the worst team in the league managed to draw with City this weekend. Any team is capable of beating the other, which makes for exciting games.
The same can be said for the Championship. That league is so competitive and each year always throws up countless surprises. Its a cracking league.
So with all the above, I find it strange when people say modern football is crap. I think its pretty good.
What I do get is that the match day experience has changed and is completely alien to that of the 70's and 80's. But I think the match day experience generally mirrors the society at the times...
The 70's crowds and atmosphere looked amazing and mirrored the rock and roll, glamorous times of the 70's. The 80's atmosphere was toxic and violent - probably a reflection of a society in recession, bogged down by miners strikes and huge unemployment. The 90's brought all seater stadium but there was an optimism in the air and a little more flair and colour - probably a reflection of the mid 90's boom and the hope that the new Labor government brought.
Nowadays we have a society that demands instant gratification, has shorter attention spans than ever before and has more distractions than ever before. If a game isn't instantly captivating its easier for fans to play on their i-phone and tweet what they think about the game rather than actually watching it or supporting the team. 20 years ago this is probably when fans would try and get songs going!! The "modern" day fan likes to piss and moan that it isn't like the good old days, and make every excuse under the sun why the atmosphere in grounds isn't very good, but they don't do anything to make it better. Credit to Palace fans who actually try.....but then they get labelled as "bloody plastic fans forcing it"....well what else are they supposed to do!!! When we tried to get singing section set up at the Lane our fans said it was stupid....yet the same fans probably moan about no atmosphere.
People will always look back with nostalgia, nothing is supposedly ever as good as it used to be e,g, music, cinema, fashion. Footballs the same. I bet in the 70's fans complained that football was better in the 60's, in the 50's it was probably better in the 40's etc. and in 15 years time people will be pining for football we have now.