Newsletter #1781
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Another break for international games this week has seen a number of Blues in action, including seeing our own David Silva pitted against England. Perhaps surprisingly, it was those wearing the 3 Lions who came out on top due in large part to an outstanding performance from Joleon Lescott who helped nullify the Spanish attack.
Back at the ranch, troubles rumble on with Tévez and a couple of our young guns, Luca Scapuzzi and Andreas Mancini have headed to Oldham on loan to get first team experience under Paul Dickov.
Today’s MCIVTA has more ongoing debate around the singing section and the first part of an entertaining 3-parter from James Nash looking back at City during the ‘MCIVTA-years’. I do hope you enjoy.
Next Game: Newcastle United, Home, 3pm, 19 November 2011ARTICLE: SINGING SECTION
In recent MCIVTA there has been mention of perhaps an attempt at creating a singing section in one of the stands at Etihad Stadium and therefore will that then mean there will be a choir practice midweek?
Whether or not the singing is organized or spontaneous and as I do not catch exactly what is being sung through only watching matches on TV on any match occasion, I guess it is not going to exactly bother me but from what I have learnt about the signing over many seasons through what I have read and the very little I have heard properly, the spontaneous is what I think gives the singing the joy of the occasion all around the ground, whether at home or away. So I hope it does not get organised. The spontaneous also brings the whole crowd into it by either joining in or trying to sing over the opposition’s crowd songs! Spontaneous also to my mind is also where the humour comes into the singing such as I understand a while back when the Rags’ debt position was in the “news”!
While on about singing, perhaps the City supporters may consider an extra song occasionally and I suggest “Moon River” due to three things that are associated with City – Mercer, Mancini and the Medlock! The Medlock I imagine runs very close by Etihad Stadium as from memory it runs through the Phillips Park Cemetery and then cuts across and then must be very close to Eastlands to then run parallel with Every Street unless perhaps that part of the river these days has been put under ground?
Trevor Bevan <mate.bevan(at)clear.net.nz>ARTICLE: BLUE MOON BEER
Just a note on Blue Moon beer: it has been available in the UK for several years now. It is a US craft wheat beer now brewed by Coors and has a great orangey flavour. Glasses are often available on eBay and are great for watching the Blues on TV. We should get City to stock it on match days; they could get it from Sainsburys!
Gordon Hindle <ghindle(at)btinternet.com>RESPONSE: HEADERS AND FOOTERS I
I don’t want to be deliberately contrary with regards John Nisbet’s suggestion, but I have to say I think we should keep the poster at the end of each article.
Why change a winning formula? It’s not that difficult to scroll down first to have a look. In any case, surely it’s the content that’s important, not who writes it. Does it really matter who the poster is? I write because I love City and love writing. Not for some big ego trip!
Maybe John is hinting that some of us (can’t think who!) write articles that are too long! Maybe not…
Phil Banerjee <phil.banerjee(at)orange.net>RESPONSE: HEADERS AND FOOTERS II
A counterpoint to John Nisbet’s suggestion to put authors’ names at the start of articles.
I find it quite entertaining to guess the author of a piece before I get to the end, and for most of the regular contributors it’s quite easy, using clues from their writing style, turns of phrase, always spelling certain players’ names wrong the same way, etc.
(ED – As opinion is at best split I’ll stick with the current format. Thanks for the thought though John)
Paul Howarth <paul(at)city-fan.org>TICKET REQUEST: Bolton (Home) March 3rd
I know it’s still a long way off but though I would get in there early! I’m hoping to fly over from Northern Ireland for the home game against Bolton on 3rd March ’12 – if anyone can help with 2 tickets that would be very much appreciated.
CTID, Gareth Leslie <gareth_leslie(at)hotmail.com>AND FINALLY… GOLDEN AGE (PART ONE OF THREE)
This article is intended as a retrospective of life as a City fan in the MCIVTA era. It is long. I’ve waffled on so much that I’ve agreed with our brand-new editor Phil to split it in to three parts, of about twenty paragraphs each. Part one below covers the years from MCIVTA’s origin through to the epic occasion of the play-off final at Wembley. Parts two and three will map the road back to success and then explore what maybe lies in store for us now. Hopefully you can stick with me through all the verbiage.
Despite being a subscriber since the very early days, I cannot remember the last time I made a contribution to MCIVTA. Since last I wrote, City have experienced a true renaissance and entered a new age in our history. Given recent extraordinary events such as the Abu Dhabi takeover, the 6-1, the Tévez saga and a Cup win – for heaven’s sake! – it is about time I dusted off the keyboard.
Is it really seventeen years since MCIVTA started out, in the era of Brian Horton’s rants at Jack Charlton, Mike Sheron’s transfer to Norwich, Maurizio Gaudinho’s fraud case, Georgi Kinkladze’s slalom runs and Uwe Rösler’s “cabbage a**e”? That seems like an innocent age when you look back across the events of the intervening years. As fans and as a club, we have picked up a few scars along the way.
The 1994/95 season that gave birth to MCIVTA was, as usual, bereft of success. The only thing to celebrate was that City stayed up – just. For long, hurtful years, we had been sorely missing a Cup final appearance or a tilt at the title and Brian Horton was having no more luck than his many predecessors.
Somehow, we all had faith that a new dawn would be just around the corner. Well, I was silly enough to have faith at least, happy to be recently shorn of Peter Swales as chairman. It would be “Forward With Franny” to glory sooner or later. Little did we know that the wilderness years were only beginning.
For me, it was the arrival of Alan Ball Jr. as manager in the following close season that started the almost terminal decline for our club. I would have to rate Ball – hand-picked by Lee, it must be said – as the worst manager we have had at City in the modern era and certainly in my time as a fan. We are not supposed to speak ill of the departed; in his case I will make an exception. He was worse than useless.
I have never felt more ashamed or eviscerated after a game than at the end of the 1995/96 season when we drew with Liverpool. Football genius Ball was telling Steve Lomas to play keep-ball near the corner flag, because a rumour had gone round the ground that a draw would secure our survival at Coventry’s expense. That rumour was false and we went down.
Ball mercifully resigned shortly into the next season; we did not have the money to sack him and pay off his contract. That relegation under him remains the low point in my life as a City fan. Tears fell after that game; maybe because I had some sixth sense about the weight of importance of that day, bearing down with forebodings for the nightmare to come.
From that Liverpool game onwards we became a joke, bouncing around the divisions with seven promotions or relegations in eight seasons, always lurching from one crisis to another. Great times were had going to games but often the dire football of the game itself ruined a good day out. Not even Frank Clark’s attempts at team-building by serenading the players with his guitar could resolve that problem. It was that bad that one of our managers, Steve Coppell, only lasted 33 days before giving up!
One match at Swindon away, shivering in plastic bucket seats hastily installed on top of a crumbling terrace, getting soaked in the howling horizontal rain as City meekly capitulated, remains emblazoned on my mind as the worst football trip ever. Less hardy souls might have called it quits at that point but somehow I and many, many others struggled through.
We often buoyed ourselves with a gallows humour aimed at our woebegone situation. We were every football fan’s favourite second team because we were not a threat and there was always the opportunity for a bit of a chuckle at our expense. Even United fans felt sorry for us. To this day, the “we lost last week and we lost today…” chant persists as a fitting reminder of those sorry times.
Crucially, we had also picked the worst possible time in football history to commit hara-kiri. The Premier League Sky money was flushing through the veins of the game for the first time, starting its total transformation into what is today’s global industry. The Champions’ League behemoth had slouched into being and the television revenues from that accelerated the effect. Throughout the football world “Manchester” meant only one thing – and it was not City.
As we sat in the old Wembley Stadium, two-nil down to Gillingham with nineteen seconds left on the clock of the Division 2 play-off final, I honestly thought that this was it for City. Still to this day I believe that another year in that god-awful division would have done for us. We would either have been wound up because of our debts or we would have faded away into a forgotten footnote of football history.
That we somehow turned it around and won that final will, I believe, be the most enduring memory of my life as a City fan. Even if (or when!) we go on to win multiple Premier League titles or back-to-back Champions’ League finals, I don’t think any football-related experience will quite match the range and depth of emotions of that day.
Before the game, everyone I spoke to knew that we needed to win. It was no ordinary final where obviously you want to win but you will take defeat on the chin. On 30th May 1999, with its background of pre-millennial angst, there was no other option than winning if the club was ever to be successful again. Everything was on the line.
So, in the space of five minutes and nineteen seconds, Kevin Horlock and Paul Dickov got the equalising goals as Mark Halsey played an egregiously long amount of injury time. Extra-time flashed by without incident; well I recall nothing of it anyway. In the end, it was the Gillingham players who choked in the penalty shoot-out. City were saved.
My abiding memory of that day is not Dickov scoring his “can you believe it?” goal, but him hitting both posts with his penalty in the shoot-out, failing to score in the most unlucky fashion possible. At that moment, doubt returned. Would fate be so capricious as to dangle the carrot of hope in front of our eyes only to cruelly pluck it away at the last and hit us with the big stick again? No, came the answer very quickly as Paul Smith, Adrian Pennock and Gary Butters – heroes to a man – all fluffed their penalties too, with a little help from Nicky Weaver of course.
Afterwards, everybody in my party was completely drained emotionally. It had meant so much and we had come so close to the precipice yet just pulled back in the most dramatic way possible. Every moment of that final had been a pressure moment and we were utterly exhausted. We did feel a twinge of remorse for Gillingham’s sake but we truly believed the win was more significant in the long-term for us than for them.
We knew we had witnessed something momentous in City’s history and were sapped of strength. It was difficult to celebrate; the plans to jump in the fountains at Trafalgar Square were quickly forgotten and we retired to a hostelry off Charing Cross Road. We had to introduce a swear-box for the word “unbelievable” as it was being abused so much. I sometimes wonder if Chris Kamara was sat ear-wigging in the corner of that pub and got the idea for his Soccer Saturday catchphrase from us. At the back of our minds, we wondered if this was a temporary reprieve from extinction, or did greatness lie in our grasp once again? Would we ever win a trophy again after so many barren years?
End of Part One…
James Nash <j.nash(at)mdx.ac.uk>RESULTS AND TABLE
League table to 13 November 2011 inclusive
HOME AWAY OVERALL P W D L F A W D L F A W D L F A GD Pts 1 Manchester City 11 5 0 0 16 2 5 1 0 23 8 10 1 0 39 10 29 31 2 Manchester Utd 11 5 0 1 18 9 3 2 0 10 3 8 2 1 28 12 16 26 3 Newcastle Utd 11 4 2 0 10 5 3 2 0 7 3 7 4 0 17 8 9 25 4 Chelsea 11 4 0 1 15 9 3 1 2 9 6 7 1 3 24 15 9 22 5 Tottenham H. 10 3 0 1 10 7 4 1 1 11 8 7 1 2 21 15 6 22 6 Liverpool 11 2 4 0 8 5 3 0 2 6 5 5 4 2 14 10 4 19 7 Arsenal 11 5 0 1 12 4 1 1 3 11 17 6 1 4 23 21 2 19 8 Aston Villa 11 3 2 1 10 6 0 4 1 6 9 3 6 2 16 15 1 15 9 Norwich City 11 2 2 1 9 7 1 2 3 7 11 3 4 4 16 18 -2 13 10 Swansea City 11 3 2 0 8 1 0 2 4 4 14 3 4 4 12 15 -3 13 11 QPR 11 1 3 2 5 9 2 0 3 5 11 3 3 5 10 20 -10 12 12 Stoke City 11 2 2 1 5 4 1 1 4 3 15 3 3 5 8 19 -11 12 13 Wolves 11 2 1 3 8 10 1 1 3 4 8 3 2 6 12 18 -6 11 14 West Brom A. 11 1 1 3 3 5 2 1 3 6 11 3 2 6 9 16 -7 11 15 Sunderland 11 1 2 2 9 7 1 2 3 5 6 2 4 5 14 13 1 10 16 Fulham 11 1 3 2 11 9 1 1 3 3 6 2 4 5 14 15 -1 10 17 Everton 10 1 1 3 5 7 2 0 3 6 8 3 1 6 11 15 -4 10 18 Bolton Wndrs 11 1 0 5 9 17 2 0 3 9 10 3 0 8 18 27 -9 9 19 Blackburn R. 11 1 0 5 6 13 0 3 2 7 11 1 3 7 13 24 -11 6 20 Wigan Athletic 11 1 1 3 5 8 0 1 5 2 12 1 2 8 7 20 -13 5With thanks to Football 365
MCIVTA FAQ [v1112.01]
[1] MCIVTA Addresses
Articles (Philip Alcock) : editor@mcivta.city-fan.org News/rumour : news@mcivta.city-fan.org Subscriptions (Madeleine Hawkins): subscriptions@mcivta.city-fan.org Technical problems (Paul) : paul@city-fan.org FAQ (David Warburton) : faq@mcivta.city-fan.org
[2] What are MCIVTA’s publishing deadlines?
Deadlines for issues are nominally 6pm, Monday and Thursday evenings by email. Unfortunately we cannot accept email attachments.
[3] MCIVTA Back Issues and Manchester City Supporters’ home page/Twitter
http://www.mcivta.com/ is the unofficial Manchester City Supporters’ home page. Created in 1994, it is the longest running of the Manchester City related web sites. Back issues of MCIVTA are also hosted on the site. You can also follow on www.twitter.com/mcivta to get the latest updates.
[4] What is the club’s official web site?
The official club web site can be found at http://www.mcfc.co.uk/ and the official club Twitter page at www.twitter.com/mcfc. The club also has a facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/mcfcofficial
[5] What supporters’ clubs are there?
The Official Supporters’ Club and the Centenary Supporters’ Association have merged to become the Manchester City Supporters’ Club (http://www.mcfcsupportersclub.com/). The club also recognise the Manchester City Disabled Supporters’ Association (http://www.mcdsa.co.uk/).
[6] Where can I find out about Points of Blue?
The committee operates as an interface between supporters and the club. Points of Blue appears on the club website under the “Fans” heading (http://www.mcfc.co.uk/Fans).
[7] What match day broadcasts are available on the web?
Live match commentary can be found on the club website. The Radio Manchester pre- and post-match phone-in is available on the web at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/england/manchester/.
[8] Where can I find out if City are live on satellite TV?
http://www.satfootball.com/ provides a listing of Premier League games being shown on UK domestic and foreign satellite channels. A useful site for North American viewers is http://msn.foxsports.com/.
[9] Do we have a Usenet newsgroup?
Yes we do: uk.sport.football.clubs.man-city is our home on usenet. If you are not familiar with Usenet, a basic explanation is available here: http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/definition/Usenet
[10] Do any squad members have their own web pages?
There are a number available and direct links can be found at http://www.mcivta.com/players/
[11] Do any squad members have their own Twitter accounts?
A list of genuine player accounts is maintained at http://twitter.com/#!/MCFC/players
[12] Where can I find match statistics?
Statistics for the current season are available from the club site, but for a more in-depth historical analysis try http://www.mcfcstats.com/.
DISCLAIMER
The views expressed in MCIVTA are entirely those of the subscribersand there is no intention to represent these opinions as being thoseof Manchester City Football Club, nor of any of the companies anduniversities by whom the subscribers are employed. It is not inany way whatsoever connected to the club or any other relatedorganisation and is simply a group of supporters using this mediumas a means of disseminating news and exchanging opinions.
Philip Alcock, editor@mcivta.city-fan.org
Editor: