The booing at the Wigan first half performance was simply a gut reaction to a dire 45 minutes of football, a less than fantastic end to the previous system, and possibly a poor team selection by O'Neill.Rightly or wrongly, that's what it was. Supporters don't sit there working out the home stats for the last 10 years. They react to what they see on the pitch. We don't get chants like "John Carew, Carew, at 6'4" he's taller than the mean height for UK adult males of 5'10", whch probably includes me and you."
Quote from: "Villadawg"It clearly wasn’t simply a reaction to the first half performance, which was poor, but at 0-1 down not disastrous. It wasn’t the previous season as a whole and it wasn’t our home form, which was just as good or as bad as many other seasons. Booing the team off when a single goal down at half time in the first game of the season is a very strange thing to have happened. Something else was at play.Witchcraft?Seriously, though, what was at play?
It clearly wasn’t simply a reaction to the first half performance, which was poor, but at 0-1 down not disastrous. It wasn’t the previous season as a whole and it wasn’t our home form, which was just as good or as bad as many other seasons. Booing the team off when a single goal down at half time in the first game of the season is a very strange thing to have happened. Something else was at play.
Quote from: "pauliewalnuts"Quote from: "Villadawg"It clearly wasn’t simply a reaction to the first half performance, which was poor, but at 0-1 down not disastrous. It wasn’t the previous season as a whole and it wasn’t our home form, which was just as good or as bad as many other seasons. Booing the team off when a single goal down at half time in the first game of the season is a very strange thing to have happened. Something else was at play.Witchcraft?Seriously, though, what was at play?I'm not sure. I just know it wasn't an ordinary reaction. I have a theory that it is related to people reading the constant stream of unwarranted negative comments on websites like this one but its just that, a theory. There is no shortage of things that have changed because of the internet and the willingness of supporters to boo their team at HT in the first game of the season might be one of those changes.
Quote from: "Villadawg"Quote from: "pauliewalnuts"Quote from: "Villadawg"It clearly wasn’t simply a reaction to the first half performance, which was poor, but at 0-1 down not disastrous. It wasn’t the previous season as a whole and it wasn’t our home form, which was just as good or as bad as many other seasons. Booing the team off when a single goal down at half time in the first game of the season is a very strange thing to have happened. Something else was at play.Witchcraft?Seriously, though, what was at play?I'm not sure. I just know it wasn't an ordinary reaction. I have a theory that it is related to people reading the constant stream of unwarranted negative comments on websites like this one but its just that, a theory. There is no shortage of things that have changed because of the internet and the willingness of supporters to boo their team at HT in the first game of the season might be one of those changes.Really? I think you're falling into the trap of assuming websites like this have a much bigger role than they do.I certainly know that the people around where I sit have no idea of the existence of this website let alone take their lead from it.There are probably a hardcore of about 50-100 people who post regularly on this web site.There are usually that many people in front of me in the queue when I go for my twice-a-season pint at half time in the Upper Trinity.
Quote from: "pauliewalnuts"Quote from: "Villadawg"Quote from: "pauliewalnuts"Quote from: "Villadawg"It clearly wasn’t simply a reaction to the first half performance, which was poor, but at 0-1 down not disastrous. It wasn’t the previous season as a whole and it wasn’t our home form, which was just as good or as bad as many other seasons. Booing the team off when a single goal down at half time in the first game of the season is a very strange thing to have happened. Something else was at play.Witchcraft?Seriously, though, what was at play?I'm not sure. I just know it wasn't an ordinary reaction. I have a theory that it is related to people reading the constant stream of unwarranted negative comments on websites like this one but its just that, a theory. There is no shortage of things that have changed because of the internet and the willingness of supporters to boo their team at HT in the first game of the season might be one of those changes.Really? I think you're falling into the trap of assuming websites like this have a much bigger role than they do.I certainly know that the people around where I sit have no idea of the existence of this website let alone take their lead from it.There are probably a hardcore of about 50-100 people who post regularly on this web site.There are usually that many people in front of me in the queue when I go for my twice-a-season pint at half time in the Upper Trinity.I doubt it is the prolific posters who are influenced, we tend to be people who hold firm opinions about this kind of stuff. How many people read these websites and are perhaps influenced by what they read? I doubt it would have been as many as 10% of the supporters booing that day. It seems feasible that some of them may have been influenced by what they read on forum websites.
...You don't seem to have much of an opinion of your fellow supporters if you think they can be influenced by a handful of comments on the internet.
Quote from: "Villadawg"We took 30 points and only once in the last 13 seasons have we accumulated more than 33 points and that was in the GTII season. Having checked, that is truly excellent spin, VD.What does 33 points have to do with it?We took 30 points. Not 33.The booing against Wigan was the first game of the 2009/10 season, and followed the 2008/9 season.2008/9 - 30 pointsAs reference, by comparison2007/8 - 33 points2006/7 - 29 points2005/6 - 24 points2004/5 - 30 points2003/4 - 33 points 2002/3 - 35 points - for a team which finished 16th.2001/2 - 31 points2000/1 - 32 points1999/0 - 32 points1998/9 - 33 pointsSo, actually, we'd only score fewer points twice in the preceeding ten years. We also didn't have a billionaire benefactor pumping in money for most of those years, either.
We took 30 points and only once in the last 13 seasons have we accumulated more than 33 points and that was in the GTII season.
I am: "the mean height for UK adult males of 5'10" and yes, John Carew is taller than me.
Really? I think you're falling into the trap of assuming websites like this have a much bigger role than they do.I certainly know that the people around where I sit have no idea of the existence of this website let alone take their lead from it.