shorehamview
Pink Sambuca drinking World Champion.
There are many reasons for supporting a football team.
I support United because of my Mum's side of the family, and in particular my Grandma. She took me to my first Blades match when I was about eight or nine, but I can't remember who against or what the score was. All I remember was sitting on the John Street side, and that it was a Saturday. However, I had it drilled into me from long before then that United were the team to support. We used to watch them on the telly together on the few occasions they were on.
I properly got the bug when I started at senior school and used to stand on the Kop with a few schoolmates, and from then on I was hooked.
My Dad's side of the family weren't interested in football in the slightest, apart from a few of the Derbyshire dwelling ones who followed Stoke or Derby. My Dad has never liked football, despite having been at many matches but as a policeman, which during the seventies and early eighties wasn't just a question of standing around in a shiny coat.
My Grandma only went with me once more, when United used to give away free reserve match tickets to schools, and I dragged her along to watch a terrible match against Man City reserves. Despite not having been to watch United for a long time, my Grandma used to listen to all United commentary on Radio Sheffield on Saturday afternoons, watching Grandstand with the sound off and the radio on, and loved watching them as televised matches became more common.
When I moved to Leicestershire to run the family pub in 1994 she used to post me a Green 'Un along with emergency food parcels of Henderson's and beef dripping, even when I came up for matches, and when one of my brothers was posted to Bosnia he got sent a copy every week too.
Of my four brothers two are confirmed Blades, the third is a Peterborough/ex-Man Utd fan, and although the youngest, now 18, was brought up as a decent Blade he now dislikes football and is into Japanese heavy metal, nail varnish and baggy jeans and big boots.
Christmas and birthday present from my Grandma and Mum were almost always Blades stuff. Books, shirts, scarves, calendars, pictures, programme binders and all manner of tat.
It's also because of my Grandma that I registered my daughter as a junior Blade when she was less than four hours old.
So my Grandma has a lot to answer for, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
I support United because of my Mum's side of the family, and in particular my Grandma. She took me to my first Blades match when I was about eight or nine, but I can't remember who against or what the score was. All I remember was sitting on the John Street side, and that it was a Saturday. However, I had it drilled into me from long before then that United were the team to support. We used to watch them on the telly together on the few occasions they were on.
I properly got the bug when I started at senior school and used to stand on the Kop with a few schoolmates, and from then on I was hooked.
My Dad's side of the family weren't interested in football in the slightest, apart from a few of the Derbyshire dwelling ones who followed Stoke or Derby. My Dad has never liked football, despite having been at many matches but as a policeman, which during the seventies and early eighties wasn't just a question of standing around in a shiny coat.
My Grandma only went with me once more, when United used to give away free reserve match tickets to schools, and I dragged her along to watch a terrible match against Man City reserves. Despite not having been to watch United for a long time, my Grandma used to listen to all United commentary on Radio Sheffield on Saturday afternoons, watching Grandstand with the sound off and the radio on, and loved watching them as televised matches became more common.
When I moved to Leicestershire to run the family pub in 1994 she used to post me a Green 'Un along with emergency food parcels of Henderson's and beef dripping, even when I came up for matches, and when one of my brothers was posted to Bosnia he got sent a copy every week too.
Of my four brothers two are confirmed Blades, the third is a Peterborough/ex-Man Utd fan, and although the youngest, now 18, was brought up as a decent Blade he now dislikes football and is into Japanese heavy metal, nail varnish and baggy jeans and big boots.
Christmas and birthday present from my Grandma and Mum were almost always Blades stuff. Books, shirts, scarves, calendars, pictures, programme binders and all manner of tat.
It's also because of my Grandma that I registered my daughter as a junior Blade when she was less than four hours old.
So my Grandma has a lot to answer for, and I wouldn't have it any other way.