If I agreed with scarf chucking, and I don't, I am keeping my Wembley scarf only ever to wear for a Wembley victory that might erase the pain of when I wore it last.
How many people fill the following criteria?1) still have the scarf;2) are willing to throw it away;3) sit close enough to the pitch to reach.Just smacks of Newcastle to me, protesting to be seen rather than for any purpose. If everyone connected with the club is not fully aware already of how pissed off fans are then they are that thick that there isn't anything that will persuade them.
But an organised and bad tempered protest on the pitch? Nailed on prosecutions and convictions
QuoteBut an organised and bad tempered protest on the pitch? Nailed on prosecutions and convictionsBlackpool fans have done it twice this season - including a pitch invader in a wheelchair. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/blackpool/11579126/Blackpool-fans-invade-pitch-and-camp-in-centre-circle-in-Karl-Oyston-protest-as-Huddersfield-match-suspended.htmlOnly 5 arrests and they weren't for fans invading the pitch but for a handful who "crossed the line of peaceful protest"
After months (years?) of campaigning to deaf ears, Blackpool fans invade the pitch twice and finally get all the publicity they were looking for.
Quote from: Chico Hamilton III on January 04, 2016, 04:25:11 PMAfter months (years?) of campaigning to deaf ears, Blackpool fans invade the pitch twice and finally get all the publicity they were looking for. Publicity yes but what they were looking for they haven't got a step closer towards.
Quote from: Chico Hamilton III on January 04, 2016, 04:25:11 PMAfter months (years?) of campaigning to deaf ears, Blackpool fans invade the pitch twice and finally get all the publicity they were looking for.Invading the pitch has been reported in the same places as all their earlier protests. You've probably still not seen it as the lead story on Sky Sports News or on the back page of any newspaper, just as their earlier protests haven't been. The thing that's generated the most publicity by a mile was one elderly bloke slagging off the owner on Facebook.These occasional pitch invasions are still having the precise same impact on removing the Oystons as if they had hadn't bothered in the first place.
Quote from: Dave on January 04, 2016, 04:42:00 PMQuote from: Chico Hamilton III on January 04, 2016, 04:25:11 PMAfter months (years?) of campaigning to deaf ears, Blackpool fans invade the pitch twice and finally get all the publicity they were looking for.Invading the pitch has been reported in the same places as all their earlier protests. You've probably still not seen it as the lead story on Sky Sports News or on the back page of any newspaper, just as their earlier protests haven't been. The thing that's generated the most publicity by a mile was one elderly bloke slagging off the owner on Facebook.These occasional pitch invasions are still having the precise same impact on removing the Oystons as if they had hadn't bothered in the first place.A premier league game abandoned after a pitch invasion would be the main story in all media. It would have no impact on Lerner, as I've said, but would make a lot of fans feel a lot better about taking control back from the club for a short time, before we disappear into the pisspot league where nobody gives a shit what the fans do. Would for me, anyway.
if we do it again they will probably relegate us 2 divisions.