glazed
Eats diamonds to beat thermodynamics
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2012
- Messages
- 7,669
I'm delighted they went down. That was the icing on the cake today.
Must admit that as satisfying as it is to see their feral fans upset at getting relegated, I will look forward to our games vs Burnley or Sheffield United a lot less than Leeds games. The atmosphere at Old Trafford is electric whenever we play them. Wouldn't mind seeing them in the PL again in a few years, maybe after their fans have suffered a couple of playoff final losses first.
You'd be more gutted if you hadAgree with this. I hate Leeds and their fans and although funny seeing them go down, it's a great fixture. They really do hate us and I'm gutted I didn't get in the away end at Elland Road to experience it.
Poor was it?You'd be more gutted if you had
Jordan’s such a fecking cretin.Simon Jordan on TS doing his usual acting dumb routine over this when it reflects badly on football business. Only then you need all the facts.
Football ownership in this country needs a vast overhaul
Crap pun about stab happy Leeds fans never mindPoor was it?
I don't think I've ever agreed with a single opinion from Simon Jordan. It's like they appoint him to just be contrarian to reason and common sense. He's a pantomime villain of talk radio.Simon Jordan on TS doing his usual acting dumb routine over this when it reflects badly on football business. Only then you need all the facts.
Football ownership in this country needs a vast overhaul
Can't stand his patter. Too full of himself and talks over people far too often. If he's such an intelligent fella why is he spending his days on a talk show and doing podcasts?I don't think I've ever agreed with a single opinion from Simon Jordan. It's like they appoint him to just be contrarian to reason and common sense. He's a pantomime villain of talk radio.
Yes he owned Palace for a time and hes now footballs guru in his head. Knows all the fancy words, talks over anyone talking sense. Complete nobI don't think I've ever agreed with a single opinion from Simon Jordan. It's like they appoint him to just be contrarian to reason and common sense. He's a pantomime villain of talk radio.
Some attribute it with the war of the roses, Lancashire vs Yorkshire, red vs white, but there might be something mythical about that. Historically I think the hatred was equal though. It seemed to kick into gear post-war in the Busby and Revie eras of the clubs (with Revie earning Leeds their "dirty Leeds" nickname). I don't think the rivalry was disproportionate from the 60's to the start of the PL (they won more titles than we did between '68 to '91 and were much better than we were in the 70s), but certainly became disproportionate when we kept winning , and they didn't.Where exactly did Leeds' visceral hatred of United come from? I know we challenged each other for a few titles in the 60s but it's hardly just that, is it?
Or we signed a few Leeds players over the years, but they got a few from us too.
And it wasn't signing Cantona because they hated us long before then!
It just seems a bit unhinged and disproportionate. Maybe it's an ego thing for them, being self-proclaimed bitter rivals with United makes them more relevant or something!
Yes, this all makes sense, the Lancashire/Yorkshire thing is pertinent historically and often gets linked to the 'wars of the roses' etc. Jokes like "the only good thing to come out of Yorkshire/Lancashire (whichever) is the M62" has been the lighter side. However, for some Leeds fans the hatred is palpable. At one time when Leeds fans were travelling to Manchester over the lower Pennines, local towns and in particular any railway stations on route had extra Police mobilised, and Police helicopters followed the fans all the way to OT.Some attribute it with the war of the roses, Lancashire vs Yorkshire, red vs white, but there might be something mythical about that. Historically I think the hatred was equal though. It seemed to kick into gear post-war in the Busby and Revie eras of the clubs (with Revie earning Leeds their "dirty Leeds" nickname). I don't think the rivalry was disproportionate from the 60's to the start of the PL (they won more titles than we did between '68 to '91 and were much better than we were in the 70s), but certainly became disproportionate when we kept winning , and they didn't.
I guess geographically it makes sense. There was a rivalry between the cities from an industrial aspect, with Manchester being the closest major city to them. It's fizzled a bit, but still makes more sense than Stoke considering us one of their most hated rivals.
I spent a fair bit of my childhood in WY, so even though they've been largely irrelevant for a long time, I still can't stand them. Glad they're gone, for a bit at least.
Same. I'm sure they exist, but I don't personally know a Leeds fan who isn't a massive arsehole, I've got friends I grew up with who were Liverpool and City fans who are mostly good lads.Yes, this all makes sense, the Lancashire/Yorkshire thing is pertinent historically and often gets linked to the 'wars of the roses' etc. Jokes like "the only good thing to come out of Yorkshire/Lancashire (whichever) is the M62" has been the lighter side. However for some Leeds fans the hatred is palpable. At one time when Leeds fans were travelling to Manchester over the lower Pennines, local towns and in particular any railway stations on route had extra Police mobilised, and Police helicopters followed the fans all the way to OT.
Certainly the Busby/Revie era fired things up, more for Leeds than us, even though Leeds got Johnny Giles (Nobby Stiles brother-in-law) from Busby, and who went on to be one of their best ever players. However many more players leaving Leeds for Manchester often came of the best.
The closeness of the two cities although split by a famous border, often gave the feeling of a 'derby' rivalry, more so for Leeds.
I can enjoy 'banter' with other fans, even City and Liverpool, but not with Leeds fans, friendly banter just does not seem to happen.