Showing posts with label Liverpool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liverpool. Show all posts

Thursday 19 October 2023

Glory Hunters and the Role of Television

A glory hunter could be described as a football fan that has associated themselves with a successful team for the self gratification of being able to say that their team is the best or similar. Such teams could be Liverpool, Manchester United or Manchester City. It is quite possible that such fans do not attend matches in person but are catered for by matches on television. The term "armchair supporter" has been used for such fans. The development of hate could occur for the associated teams, especially amongst supporters who attend matches or those that support a local team (considered a birth right).

Monday 11 September 2023

Top 4 Reasons Why a Supporter May Hate Another Team

 The main reasons a supporter may start to hate another team:

4 Personal. A supporter may have personal reasons for hating another team, not shared by any others of the same club. For example when visiting another teams ground, having a bad experience like a poor quality pie leading to a uncomfortable journey home or an on-going football team based conversation over months or years between two work about their respective football teams. 

3 Frequency of a certain fixture. If two teams regularly meet over several seasons a rivalry can develop. This could be common amongst teams who routinely finish in the top half of the Premier League e.g. Manchester City, Manchester United, Liverpool, Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea. Unlike in other Leagues or Divisions their is no promotion meaning repeat fixtures reoccur season after season, potentially compounded with cup competitions.

2 Historical hatred. A hating of another team may be due to historical factors. For example when Leeds United popular in the 1970s they would have attracted haters due to their success or other fan's jealousy which has become engrained over time despite a fall in Leeds United's success. Indeed supporters of certain clubs perpetuate such hatred to new generations who were not born when the the hating started.

1 Local rivalry. Supporters of local teams are most likely to hate each other because of the banter which is inescapable in school, workplace or pub. The teams in question may regularly or rarely play each other but the "community effect" never goes away. For example Celtic and Rangers in Glasgow, or the close proximity of the City of Newcastle and City of Sunderland and their respective teams; Newcastle United and Sunderland. Similar local rivalry could be extended to international fixtures like between England and Scotland.