TLC- SVERIGES STÖRSTA OCH BÄSTA BLOGG OM BRITTISK FOTBOLL

söndag 18 mars 2012

10 reasons why supporting a Non League Football Club makes sense

Ibland ramlar man över läsvärda blogginlägg som man gärna vill dela med sig av. Den här gången rör det verkligen en hjärtesak - Non League football. Helt skamlöst snor jag texten utan författarinnans lov och hoppas slippa undan rättsliga repressalier:

1. By supporting your local club, you’re supporting your local community.

And that is a sensible thing to do. You’re counteracting social exclusion and fragmentation, isolation and people’s general indifference towards what’s going on around them. In times of recession and personal hardships, London Riots and increasing Youth crime you know why it’s making sense to play a constructive part within your local community. Non League Football clubs are very active in organising cultural and social events such as concerts, comedy nights or away trips like Golf days or to the racing as they’re always keen to attract new supporters. They’re also well aware that such occasions are a great way to strengthen the community spirit amongst the supporters and that organising such events is one of of their responsibilities within the local community. When a club is fortunate enough to have a Supporters Trust, like Hampton does, its members are often very active when it comes to organising events or taking part in community activities such as fairs and parades. The other pillar of community involvement of a Non League Club is of course the development of youth football. When joining the youth team or Football Academy of a club, local children and young people are given the opportunity to develop their footballing and social skills on and off the pitch. This will not only strengthen their personal development but also their identification with their home town

2. The rich don’t need to get richer and the poor don’t need to get poorer.

It’s bad enough that society is going that way but when it comes to football we all got a choice. Why support a rich Premier League club that really doesn’t need your hard earned money when a Non League club is desperately needing every penny to make ends meet to remain in business? And as mentioned above, it’s not just the footballing side that a club is responsible for but all the other aspects as mentioned in point 1. This of course doesn’t mean you have to stop supporting your League Club. Just by attending matches of your local club only now and then you’re already making a great contribution. And many League team supporters will find the experience so rewarding that their professional team will in return become their second team as they start to support their Non League club ‘full-time’. This continues to be the case at Hampton. Ask any fan there and most of them will tell you a similar story about how they got disillusioned with League football- or simply couldn’t afford it any longer- and ended up at the Beveree. And- if you’re a season ticket holder of any League club, you can get in half price at Hampton matches.

3. You can get involved

I’m selling the Golden Goal tickets at Hampton home matches. I know, it doesn’t sound that exciting but it’s actually really rewarding to hear at the end of the season how much money we made for the club just by selling those tickets. It adds up to 1000’s of pounds. And that’s really cool.

4. You make new friends.

As much as I love Hampton, I have to admit that the football wasn’t that rewarding the last few seasons. But that’s OK. We’ve seen better times before and they will come again. But just by thinking of the amount of good friends I’ve made since I’ve been supporting the club makes all of this worthwhile: the cold Tuesday night matches standing behind the goal in the pouring rain and waking up the next morning with a fever, the 5th home defeat in a row when you just wonder what the hell is going on, those popular away trips to Chelmsford, the heart-warming encounters with our Womble friends*. It’s all worthwhile because you experience it with people you like and get on with. No one is in it alone. Just one example. One day we were playing Woking at home. At the far end of the pitch I spotted a little flag someone had put up on the hoardings. Did my eyes play a trick on me? No, they didn’t. It was the German flag. Turns out Simone, a football fan from Bavaria, was visiting Woking where she used to work as an Au-pair. Since that time she has been following Woking FC. On that day she came along with the Woking fans on their away trip to Hampton. We’ve since met up many times at Hampton or Woking home matches respectively and have stayed in touch on Facebook. And then there is Christian the groundhopper from North Germany who supports St. Pauli, my friend Callie who teaches German, my Womble mate...ups, there I said it. Yes, I’m friends with an AFC Wimbledon supporter. I’m such a traitor.

5. You identify with your local club and community.

See point 1. Local patriotism is not a bad thing.

6. It’s more affordable.

40 quid for a Premier League ticket? I don’t think so.

7. You have a direct view on the pitch.

I’ve been to Wembley, the Millennium Stadium, Craven Cottage, to the Mercedes-Benz Arena, to Anfield ... and as magnificent as all those places are, I’ve never actually seen in detail a player’s facial expression when scoring a goal, or a well executed tackle, or heard players exchange their pleasantries on the pitch... the action is just too far away! OK, now and then you might get the odd Non League ground where the stands and the pitch seem to have different postcodes (Chelmsford being a good example) but generally speaking you’re sitting or standing directly by the turf. To sum up, at a Non League match more or less nothing escapes your eyes and ears. And that’s quite fun.

8. You can go on unique away trips.

Truro away on a Tuesday night might not be the most sensible of ideas but I can confirm that everyone of the ampton lot who embarked on this journey made it back alive. I remember when I started to support Hampton I went to most of the away trips that season. I was new to London and by traveling to such places like Welling, Dulwich, St. Albans, Norbiton, Bromley and Woking I got a good idea of which places one might want to visit again... or not. Trips further away are fun too, especially when you get a chance to see the sea. Dover and Bognor Regis away I have fond memories of. A pint of lager at the ground in Bognor was £2. That left a lasting impression on me. And then there was of course the once in a lifetime experience of meeting one of my all time biggest heroes- Ken Loach- at Bath FC. Actually it wasn’t once in a lifetime, because I met him again when we played Bath at home. While I was talking to him we scored twice. And I was only speaking to him for three minutes. In the end, Bath got promoted and we weren’t, so Mr Loach has had the last laugh.

9. You can chat to the players and the manager.

At which Premier League club can you have a drink with the players or the manager in the bar after the match? Exactly! How many football fans are wishing every Saturday that they could tell the manager what he is doing wrong and how they would do things differently. Well, at a Non League Clubyou have the opportunity to do exactly that.

10. Enjoy a special atmosphere.

One of the loveliest aspects of Non League football is that there is no segregation. You can mix and mingle with fans from the other club. You can also drink alcohol in the stands in sight of the pitch whichis great. Football and beer is just like tea and milk, Laurel and Hardy, Fish and Chips...you get the idea. Don’t separate what belongs together.

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Originaltexten återfinns här:
http://ninaantonia.blogspot.se/2012/02/10-reasons-why-supporting-non-league.html

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