I've missed a handful of games in 30 years, home, away, Europe. I don't really like the way you characterise me to be honest. I want my loyalty to keep going for another 30 years and if I live long enough, whatever comes after that. The idea of not going fills me with teeth aching anxiety. I want to go, I love to go.The only games I've ever missed are when I've been ill and have never sold my ticket on and never would.I've dedicated decades of my life to this thing of ours and you're snarling in resentment. That's a you a problem.The idea that I should give that credit up, quite frankly, fucking no. Not now, not ever. Your last sentence is the biggest load of wrongness I've ever read on here. You don't get it at all, so no wonder you don't think loyalty matters.
I'm not sure anything you say changes the validity of my point. Yeah, your personal attendance goes back further and I commend your loyalty. That doesn't change the overarching point that the '19 aways' have to buy 19 this season and will do so whether they want to attend or not. And of course the vast majority won't have a track record anything like yours and I would wager a large portion will sell some on.And it's not snarling resentment. I wouldn't be able to get to more than a handful of away games either way, so it doesn't make much difference to me. I just observe that a system where the same 3,000 people will go for the next 10 years without any prospect of younger fans breaking into that cycle is clearly flawed.But as I said, I get it. Jack's alright.
Some tickets, maybe a lot more than some might be freed up if they were to weed out the charlied up, pissed morons who seem to be ever present away followers. It might make the experience a bit more enjoyable to everyone else who follows too.