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about how it felt to be a Newcastle fan at the weekend. It ticked all the necessary boxes – an assumption that I’m deluded, a reference to our highly questionable owners and a reminder that other clubs have it worse than we do. We then wrapped the whole rant about the thought police up by policing my thoughts on whether I’m allowed to enjoy us winning, if it ever happens. I assume the implication is that there’s a right and wrong answer there, Matt.
Now, will it be worth it if Newcastle ever win? I don’t know. I’ve never seen us win a major trophy. I don’t know the difference. A very good friend of mine was a Manchester City fan. The day they won the Premier League for the first time, he tells me the emotions were indescribable. Then they won again, and it was… fine but way less good than the first time. It turns out winning all the time is quite boring. Then he started to ask where the money was coming from.
I’ve never seen either of my teams win anything. I don’t know what the feeling is actually like? I was at Wembley for the Euro final, I was in Hyde park for the WC semi-final, I was in Wembley on Sunday – the euphoria running up to each, especially the latter was incredible, and I am desperate to imagine the feeling of going one step further.
Initially, the expectation would be that the owner is financially viable, right? Then what else? Have a clear plan in terms of how to develop the club sustainably? How to develop the infrastructure and structural hierarchy? Positive community engagement? For example: The new owners of Newcastle United have an appalling record related to human rights in their country. This is beyond doubt. From a moral standpoint, they are on shakey ground. But it’s hard to argue that in the year or so of owning the club, they’ve not done an excellent job.
On ESL – I understand, Chris. You support Tottenham. That means misery after misery to the point spursing it is an English term. So money for Daniel Levy run club is paramount to break free of said misery. But I don’t think Chelsea-Roman and Man City needed it. Roman practically lost a million pounds a week for 19 years he owned Chelsea, and the last few years, we were breaking even anyways. It was the other 4 that needed ESL, and FOMO was why Chelsea and City joined ESL.
Honestly though, so proud of a very young team tonight, it would have been very easy for Jon Dahl Tomasson to have played a youth team due to injuries and the priority of the Play Offs. He went for momentum though, fair play.
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