Tyler Durden
Well Loved Icon
- Banned
- #1
Reading the long, rambling statement from Dolphin Killer in which he's offering the grunters season ticket refunds brought up a question in my mind.
Can you really be counted as a supporter if you view your relationship to your club as a transactional one?
At no point during the Adkins season did I think "I want my money back" despite the mind-numbing, soul destroying shite I was witnessing on the pitch. It just didn't occur to me.
Purchasing a season ticket isn't some investment that rewards your money with on-field success. It's an expression of active support and at best a display of blind faith.
As a fan (especially one of Sheffield United) you willingly live this life with an acceptance that your efforts and your wishes won't be fulfilled.
This is why football -despite being referred to as a 'business' in the modern era- can never entirely run on business principles where fans are part of the equation.
If you receive a poor product for your money in any other situation, you move on to a better competitor. If you get a poor return on an investment you cut your losses. Football up until now doesn't work that way, not when you factor in emotional attachment.
Is the Pig owners offer a sign of a changing attitude from modern football fans or is it just a gesture aimed at placating the grunters?
Can you really be counted as a supporter if you view your relationship to your club as a transactional one?
At no point during the Adkins season did I think "I want my money back" despite the mind-numbing, soul destroying shite I was witnessing on the pitch. It just didn't occur to me.
Purchasing a season ticket isn't some investment that rewards your money with on-field success. It's an expression of active support and at best a display of blind faith.
As a fan (especially one of Sheffield United) you willingly live this life with an acceptance that your efforts and your wishes won't be fulfilled.
This is why football -despite being referred to as a 'business' in the modern era- can never entirely run on business principles where fans are part of the equation.
If you receive a poor product for your money in any other situation, you move on to a better competitor. If you get a poor return on an investment you cut your losses. Football up until now doesn't work that way, not when you factor in emotional attachment.
Is the Pig owners offer a sign of a changing attitude from modern football fans or is it just a gesture aimed at placating the grunters?