Why? How? When?

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I could expand on this till kingdom come but as the thread title says......I'm not talking about Brexit or Donald Trump I'm wanting to know why? How? When? And why ?! You became a Blade... expanded posts appreciated.

Personally I could expand rapidly about why I'm a Blade, through mother and father and their/my family too, add to this my first few games were mediocre (got me prepared early) but then I fingerpoint the Blackburn quarter final as a 7/8 year old as a defining moment, the whole atmosphere swallowed me and from then on I've had ups and downs to which I still can't figure out which I've had more of, like I've said I could expand forever but what/why/how/when turned you into being a Blade ?

Mind your own f*cking business!

Oh go on then, I'll tell...

Because this kid that I used to go down the woods and make dens with - the one who first taught me to masturbate - was a Blade. I immediately formed an association between Sheffield United Football Club and extreme surges of pleasure. I still get excited now at the prospect of watching them, but after so many years of impotent football I am much more able to control myself.
 



As a young lad growing up in S6 in the early 70s I was from a family of non attending Wendy's and probably expected to be one of them. My best mate however was a blade thanks to his Grandad (RIP) and I somehow found myself more attracted to the red half. After a summer soccer camp with The Star the reward was to see a Sheffield team of your choice and I had no hesitation in picking United. We were on the slide at the time (1977) and my first game was a 2-1 win against Fulham notable for a certain George Best playing for Fulham and a late Woody thunderbolt. I was completely hooked after that and would literally go to the match with anyone who would take me (9-10 years old) This carried on until the age of 14 when I started going with mates in the 4th division culminating with me not having missed a home game and going to 13 aways on the football specials without my mothers knowledge (I came clean at the age of 47. .... she was horrified!) From then on it's been a religion with my own family following in my footsteps.
Watching United drives you fuckin nuts but I honestly wouldn't have it any other way
Great post. Did Bobby Moore play for Fulham as well that day, or have I made that up?
 
Brought up in North Yorkshire and went to Elland Road in the late 60's, early 70's, but never felt passion in my gut.

Was moving to Sheffield in 71 and met a bloke who took me to the Cardiff game in April. Stood near the Pavilion, lousy view but Wow! 46 years on and I still love the 200 mile round trip to every home game.

There is something about Sheffield people that make the City and the club magic - ask TC why he loves it.

Joe Elliott
Sean Bean
Chris Wilder
3 of our own.

Good times just around the corner.

Magic once again.

UTB
 
as a relatively new poster I've been made aware this thread has been about before under different guises so thanks to the posters who've took time to explain again, just goes to show the love for the club and the love football supporters in general have for the game. I love explaining to foreigners of BDTBL why I'm a Blade I'll never get bored of it and it appears some of you fee the same !
After a few disappointing results reading this has cheered me up !
 
as a relatively new poster I've been made aware this thread has been about before under different guises so thanks to the posters who've took time to explain again, just goes to show the love for the club and the love football supporters in general have for the game. I love explaining to foreigners of BDTBL why I'm a Blade I'll never get bored of it and it appears some of you fee the same !
After a few disappointing results reading this has cheered me up !
Yes, this has been done before but there seems to be a lot of new posters since it was last done so no harm in a re-run.

I grew up knowing the Blades were the team I preferred but didn't go til I was just 15. My mate, who was from a staunch Blade family said to me at school one day 'why don't you come to the Lane with me on Saturday, it's brilliant, you'd love it'. So I did and he was right. I thought 'I've known you for three years, why didn't you fucking ask me before?'

The game was Wrexham 1982, we won 2-0 and Edwards scored. Nearly thirty five years ago. Still in touch with my mate, still go to the Lane with him on occasions. Still wished he'd asked me a year earlier.
 
My Dad married into a family a Blades fans who go way back following United. Originally from Devon, when he moved up to Sheffield he was taken by my uncles to BDTBL. When I was old enough I was taken (Southampton, 1st game 71/72) and plonked on the white fence on John Street. Hooked from that moment and passed the affliction on to my sons.
 
I've no idea! I was too busy being star struck by the other football genius on the pitch..... no not Best, but Woody!
 
Anybody know if there is some kind of list where the individual bricks are located?
Yes, if you look on the walls outside the ground you'll see a list of where they are located. Each entry on the list is the size of a brick though, so you'll need to do some walking round to read the whole list. Hope this helps. :D
 



My mother wasn't a football fan and my Dad was a Crystal Palace fan. They met in and married in the early 70s. He has an aircraft handler on the Ark Royal and had moved to Yeovilton airbase to work as a Naval Fireman, and my mother was a Wren. She had a few miscarriages and when I was on the way she wanted to move back to Sheffield to be closer to her family. The football lineage of my Sheffield family came from Shiregreen consisted of my Grandad a true old school Sheffield socialist who was heavily involved in the trade unions and his interests were Sheffield United and Yorkshire cricket, and i was weaned on tales of Jimmy Hagen and Doc Pace, and my mums 3 younger brothers who were all big Unitedite and all still are.

They ended up getting a council house at Angram Bank, High Green and I came kicking and screaming in to the world in November 1977, slap bang in to the middle of a Wednesday strong hold. I came under pressure from my peers to follow the herd and support Wednesday, and even got took to a game in the early 80s when I disclosed to the other kids at the match that i was a Unitedite and some of the bigger boys gave me a Chinese burn and tried to make me cry and make me become one of them. However my first United game came on a Tuesday night. I was taken to my Grandma and Grandads because Dad was at work, my sister had to go to the children's hospital with my Mum and it ruined Grandads plans as Grandma had bingo so instead of staying at home I got taken to the Lane and was hooked from that point.

1980s Angram Bank wasn't a place to be a Blade, the vast majority of the other kids were Wedneadayites and you would get kicked picked on for being a Blade, but I liked being different, I always knew that being a Blade meant that I knew that me and my fellow Blade mates were superior to the arrogant, posturing gruntlets, and that continued right through the rest of my school years and adolescence. Ecclesfield School was even worse as the gruntlets seemed to multiply and they got good for a while on the pitch, and it seemed like everyone jumped on the bandwagon. (Most of them haven't been to a game for years now) However I was always United daft from being a young boy, I was regularly given all sorts of different United merchandise from my Grandad and Uncles, programmes to be read inside out for days, scarves, hats, shirts and i was taken to games, and when they didn't take me my old man began to take an interest and take me as well, and even had a couple of years as being a season ticket holder in the 90s, although his heart was still with Crystal Palace and i often would go and watch Palace when I was taken to see my relatives down south or when they played up north, and the 1997 play off final has a lot of good memories as well as I took my Dad on the United end and it was a quality day with him, and treasured memories as he passed away 13 years ago.

I don't think that in a way you choose to support United, it is a mixture of circumstance and serendipity that you get chosen to be a Blade. Right from being little I was always going to be a Blade, and it has given me some great times. Most of my closest friendships are with fellow Blades, I've travelled all over the country and made a lot of friends through United. I've even got a mate who i grew up with, and whose family lived two doors down from mine at Shiregreen and our kids will be the 4th generation of Blades to be friends with each other. I met my best mate when I worked for the summer at Skegness Butlins, mainly because we got talking about the Blades as we was both massive United fans. There might have been some times when the football has been shite, but being able to go to a match, spend some quality time with my mates has given me more than the football sometimes has. It is feeling like being a part of a community and something special that has given me a lot over the years and I'm glad that I became a Blade, because I wouldn't change any of it.
 
I could expand on this till kingdom come but as the thread title says......I'm not talking about Brexit or Donald Trump I'm wanting to know why? How? When? And why ?! You became a Blade... expanded posts appreciated.

Personally I could expand rapidly about why I'm a Blade, through mother and father and their/my family too, add to this my first few games were mediocre (got me prepared early) but then I fingerpoint the Blackburn quarter final as a 7/8 year old as a defining moment, the whole atmosphere swallowed me and from then on I've had ups and downs to which I still can't figure out which I've had more of, like I've said I could expand forever but what/why/how/when turned you into being a Blade ?

As a child I wasn't interested in football. My dad was never really bothered either, he'd watched some amateur football in London when he was younger but had stopped going when he met my mother.
When I started school I was asked which football team I supported, I said that I didn't know so when I went home I asked my mum and she told me that "we support United." My maternal grandad who was from Aberdeen had become a Blade when he moved to Sheffield and had seen them in our last Wembley cup final so I suppose I had him to thank although I think he'd stopped going by this time.
Anyway, when I went back to school I told them I supported United which went down like a lead balloon as all the other lads in my year were pigs apart from one other lad.
I stood by The Blades throughout my childhood even though I still didn't have any interest in football until I was about ten when another mate told me he supported United and did I want to go with him to The Lane with him.
My first game was against Hull City on a Tuesday night in spring 1969 I think, we drew one all and I instantly felt that I belonged, so much so that I had a season ticket for the next season and the rest is history.
 
Born and grew up on a council estate in Barnsley so i had a mix of Man Utd, Liverpool, Arsenal, Spurs, Barnsley and Pigs but never any blades, except Big Seph. I was a Liverpool fan up to being about 7 or 8 mainly because my older brother was, even went to swillsboro (I know) on a couple of occasions to cheer Liverpool on. Big Seph decided that i'd been to one ground in Sheffield i may as well visit the other, his beloved Bramall Lane. He took me to my first blades game in about 94/95 it was an FA Cup replay against QPR and united won 1-0. At that point i couldn't claim i had the red and white coursing through my veins.

It wasn't until a few years later maybe 2000-01 where the love grew, we started going to more games, big Seph worked a lot of the time so it was always only a handful of games we could get to each season. Someone more intelligent than I am said "You don't choose a football club, it's something that grows naturally, an affinity you find at that place, with that club, in that ground. You find a piece of yourself there and feel like you belong" For me it's the fizz I get in my stomach walking to the ground, the nervous excitement that comes from supporting us, i've had it since i used to walk up to the ground from the train station as a boy with my dad, and still get it now, some years later.

There's a certain attitude and togetherness Blades seem to carry, in day to day life when you happen to bump into a fellow Blade, there's a mutual nod of appreciation and no need to talk attendances or history, when we meet fans of other clubs we can have fun discussion with none of the "please be our friend, please acknowledge us, please say you hate our enemy" mentality from south Barnsley. So keep it up you magical bastards you are all incredible!

Seph
 
My dad's side of the family have been Blades since 1889, so I really had no say in the matter.

And despite all the crap I've had to put up with over the years I wouldn't trade it for anything else.
 

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