Lazy blogging

I’m so lazy I even nicked the post title from Rikaitch. This was posted on NUFC.com and they ripped it from The Times. I just like it. It’s well-written and sums up how I feel about St James’ Park as well. Shame Gaby’s already taken. I’m sure we’d be great together *sigh*

TV Presenter Gabby Logan writing in The Times on Friday about her admiration for the new Wembley but her adoration of a ground closer to home:

On Monday, while watching the live action in the afternoon for Match of the Day, I was sitting alongside Alan Shearer.

When the teams walked out for Newcastle v Arsenal there was a fantastic camera angle that showed the stadium from what felt like a single blade of grass, looking up to the Gods.

“Now that’s a coliseum,” Shearer pined. He didn’t need to tell me — St James’ Park is up there with the Bernabéu and the Nou Camp for atmosphere and grandeur.

There was a survey of Premiership fans a few years ago and, when asked which was their favourite away ground, 18 out of 19 said Newcastle’s. Sunderland were in the Premiership at the time so I’ll let you guess which set of supporters dissented.

St James’ Park also has the enviable characteristic of being truly a city stadium. You can walk to the train station and the bars, restaurants and hotels in five minutes.

That doesn’t just mean you can be sitting in a swish watering hole 15 minutes after the final whistle enjoying a glass of something chilled, it means that in the build-up to the match the whole town knows that there is a game of football on, and as you come out of the shops on Northumberland Street you can hear the roar when a goal is scored.

Of course I am biased. They are my team and I cut my teeth doing postmatch interviews on the touchline there, getting to the ground before the players, seeing the place become the Theatre of Hope and Expectation, if not Dreams.

I will always love it — I can understand why people have their ashes spread on the pitch and why fans arrive at the ground three hours early. It’s possible to appreciate other stadiums, for sure, but you’ll only really ever love one.

Incorrect priorities

To the BBC

Dear Sir,

As a license-fee payer I was incensed by the BBC’s insensitive attitude to a major event yesterday evening. I do understand that schedules can slip for some reason, but given the importance and need for reflection on the events of the day, I can see no acceptable circumstance for the 5 minute delay to the start of Match of the Day.

As someone who attended the game and thus didn’t have the benefit of an instant replay, I was desperate to find out what had happened with Dyer and Bowyer. I was kept on the edge of my seat for five additional stressful minutes as a result of the BBC News running over. Have the BBC no idea of the anxiety and upset this kind of thoughtless messing with the TV listings can cause?

Yours,

Disgusted of Bradford

Cup Semi ticket
Cup Semi ticket

Woop! Woop! Woop!

See picture. ‘Nuff said.

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Footballing Nazi

Di Canio - Nazi?
Di Canio - Nazi?

According to the Italian FA, this photograph of Paulo Di Canio from yesterday’s Rome derby shows him making a fascist salute – something very, very bad under Italian law. Oops.

Mind you… to me it just looks like a footballer raising his hand after scoring. Or maybe Alan Shearer is also a fascist. After all, that’s the exact celebration you get from Newcastle’s number 9 after every goal. Ever get the feeling the Italians are about as overly-sensitive about trying to rewrite (or erase) the history books as the Germans are about swastikas?

Photo by Associated Press and nabbed from the related BBC News page.

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