All that is great, if we just want the club to be some monument to Victorian-era success and long-lost status.If we want to actually be what we were, we need to have the ground we can make the next load of history in.I love the Holte End exterior, it's like nothing else I've ever been to and I'm proud walking up those steps. I'd have it over anything anyone has got.But it's the fibreglass castle at Disneyland. It's a cheap nod to glories over a hundred years in the past. Three out of the four stands have hardly ever seen us be anything other than mediocre. If we want people to still be looking up at our great club in another hundred years we need to un-shackle ourselves from all this manufactured sentiment and build the foundations we need to be great here and now.
Forest's case of extracting the best value out of the Johnson deal might have some merit were it not for the fact they've signed 40 odd players over the three transfer windows since they came up.
Quote from: luke95 on March 18, 2024, 01:45:47 PMQuote from: Risso on March 18, 2024, 01:21:07 PMQuote from: Clive W on March 18, 2024, 01:12:17 PMI feel exactly the same but I think it’s probably an age thingMy first visit to VP was 27 December 1965 against West Ham - a Christmas present from my parents We lived in Kent and had a horrendous drive up through the snow and ice (don’t think the M6 existed in those days)We had a Hillman Minx and even though it was the “de-Lux” version it didn’t have a radio - but it did have a bench front seat and a gear stick on the steering wheel All the way up I had my ear glued to my transistor radio trying to hear whether the match was still on It was - but was abandoned after 30 minutes because of the frozen pitch Memories like that make it very hard for me to imagine watching Villa in some shiny new stadiumBut obviously there's a barely a single brick of the ground from that day still in place. Since then there have been four completely new stands, and now two of those desperately need replacing. We've got a 70s concrete eyesore (/ brutalist masterpiece, whatever), a 90s cheap as chips piece of shit that looks like a warehouse, a modern replacement for the Leitch masterpiece, and the Holte End with a modern frontage that everybody seems to think is old, but isn't.But it's still Villa Park We've had thousands of different players & managers represent us over the years but it's still Aston Villa FC.They both go hand in hand you can't have one without the other.My thoughts too LukePerhaps others can phrase it better than me (I think this was Peter Morris)“The door to the lavishly appointed Guest Room at Villa Park was open and out in the corridor the little boys, dodging the commissionaire, were calling for Brian Little and John Gidman. Quite rightly, they took no notice of myself and the elderly bald-headed man, bespectacled, stooping a little, who was quietly finishing his tea. He looked over at them for a moment, a whimsical look, and moved to the long window overlooking the now deserted playing pitch."Every time you come here it must bring back memories Pongo," I said. He stared out for a long while. I thought he'd forgotten I was there. "Aye", he said suddenly "aye, they're a great club...the greatest." I stood and looked with him, this old man whose goals had set the Villa crowds roaring so long ago. It was not quite dusk on that March afternoon and I saw them too...they were out again, the old ghosts...Jack Hughes, scorer just about one hundred years earlier of Aston Villa's first goal (perhaps to the very day)...George Ramsay...the Hunter brothers...Willie McGregor...Denny Hodgetts...legion upon legion of them on parade now, filling the field with claret and blue...the century with pride.”
Quote from: Risso on March 18, 2024, 01:21:07 PMQuote from: Clive W on March 18, 2024, 01:12:17 PMI feel exactly the same but I think it’s probably an age thingMy first visit to VP was 27 December 1965 against West Ham - a Christmas present from my parents We lived in Kent and had a horrendous drive up through the snow and ice (don’t think the M6 existed in those days)We had a Hillman Minx and even though it was the “de-Lux” version it didn’t have a radio - but it did have a bench front seat and a gear stick on the steering wheel All the way up I had my ear glued to my transistor radio trying to hear whether the match was still on It was - but was abandoned after 30 minutes because of the frozen pitch Memories like that make it very hard for me to imagine watching Villa in some shiny new stadiumBut obviously there's a barely a single brick of the ground from that day still in place. Since then there have been four completely new stands, and now two of those desperately need replacing. We've got a 70s concrete eyesore (/ brutalist masterpiece, whatever), a 90s cheap as chips piece of shit that looks like a warehouse, a modern replacement for the Leitch masterpiece, and the Holte End with a modern frontage that everybody seems to think is old, but isn't.But it's still Villa Park We've had thousands of different players & managers represent us over the years but it's still Aston Villa FC.They both go hand in hand you can't have one without the other.
Quote from: Clive W on March 18, 2024, 01:12:17 PMI feel exactly the same but I think it’s probably an age thingMy first visit to VP was 27 December 1965 against West Ham - a Christmas present from my parents We lived in Kent and had a horrendous drive up through the snow and ice (don’t think the M6 existed in those days)We had a Hillman Minx and even though it was the “de-Lux” version it didn’t have a radio - but it did have a bench front seat and a gear stick on the steering wheel All the way up I had my ear glued to my transistor radio trying to hear whether the match was still on It was - but was abandoned after 30 minutes because of the frozen pitch Memories like that make it very hard for me to imagine watching Villa in some shiny new stadiumBut obviously there's a barely a single brick of the ground from that day still in place. Since then there have been four completely new stands, and now two of those desperately need replacing. We've got a 70s concrete eyesore (/ brutalist masterpiece, whatever), a 90s cheap as chips piece of shit that looks like a warehouse, a modern replacement for the Leitch masterpiece, and the Holte End with a modern frontage that everybody seems to think is old, but isn't.
I feel exactly the same but I think it’s probably an age thingMy first visit to VP was 27 December 1965 against West Ham - a Christmas present from my parents We lived in Kent and had a horrendous drive up through the snow and ice (don’t think the M6 existed in those days)We had a Hillman Minx and even though it was the “de-Lux” version it didn’t have a radio - but it did have a bench front seat and a gear stick on the steering wheel All the way up I had my ear glued to my transistor radio trying to hear whether the match was still on It was - but was abandoned after 30 minutes because of the frozen pitch Memories like that make it very hard for me to imagine watching Villa in some shiny new stadium
Quote from: Dogtanian on March 18, 2024, 02:17:31 PMAll that is great, if we just want the club to be some monument to Victorian-era success and long-lost status.If we want to actually be what we were, we need to have the ground we can make the next load of history in.I love the Holte End exterior, it's like nothing else I've ever been to and I'm proud walking up those steps. I'd have it over anything anyone has got.But it's the fibreglass castle at Disneyland. It's a cheap nod to glories over a hundred years in the past. Three out of the four stands have hardly ever seen us be anything other than mediocre. If we want people to still be looking up at our great club in another hundred years we need to un-shackle ourselves from all this manufactured sentiment and build the foundations we need to be great here and now.This and the post from Risso sum it up for me. We all love Villa park but as it stands it's a shackle to the past that risks damaging our future.I see 3 options:Knock down the North and DE, make the best of it and eek our way to 55k-ish stadium which would just about hang onto the coattails of teams around us.Rebuild on the same site, taking a couple of seasons away from Villa Park and maybe getting a little over 60k but still ahving a lot of the problems we have now.Build new elsewhere, only move when it's complete and find a site with better opportunities on non-match days, with room for more pre and post match facilities and with better transport links.