American Reacts to FUNNIEST FOOTBALL CHANTS BY ENGLISH FOOTBALL FANS 2023 Reaction
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- Опубліковано 21 гру 2023
- #footballchants #englishfootball #reaction
American King Boomer's Reaction to the Funniest Chants by English Football Fans in 2023 Part 3 by Fan's Perspective. ENJOY!
Original Video: • FUNNIEST CHANTS BY ENG...
The Fan's Perpsective: / @thefansperspective
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Anyone who claims it is a major insult here in the uk , has never been properly insulted.
It ain't even close to insults. It just great banter innit
True story
He must be a health and safety guy lol
Had to come here to comment that but you already did. 😂 major insult? Most definitely not.
As an American once said online, "You've never been told to f**k off until a Brit has told you to f**k off!" True, that. 😁
"Muppet" isn't a "major" insult. It's mainly used in banter between mates
Muppet is probably one of the most light hearted and endearing insults we have lol.
I call my little cousin a Muppet - he's only 9 and it's a perfectly acceptable "matey" insult. Bless him, he calls be Gonzo, because I've got a "big nose".
It's an epithet denoting significant incompetence in any and all situations, but especially pulling. You muppet.
It is considered a genuine insult..lol
Give it a rest u muppet
Muppet is the lightest possible way of calling someone an idiot 😂 anyone gets offended by being called a muppet they need serious help
KB if anyone from the UK tells you that "muppet" is a major insult here, they are the type who are void of a sense of humour and void of the ability to go outside
It sounds like an American getting wrongly offended on our behalf and telling him that 😂. I can’t imagine anyone here thinking it’s an insult when even my kids teacher calling him that once for saying something silly 😂.
Geordie is pronounced Jordie, and its not a derogatory insult its a name for someone from Newcastle, people use it all the time it's like calling someone from London a Londoner or someone from Glasgow a Glasweigien.
😂😂Gordey
I concur 😂
yeah there are a lot more colourful and fitting words for Londoners
Wellllllllllllll, If someone called me a Geordie. I would certainly be very insulted. That's down to regional rivalry. 😀
Actually, someone from Newcastle is a Novacastrian
"Old castle" 🤣🤣🤣 You muppet Brian 😉 As a Geordie from Newcastle this made me laugh. 😂 We always sing "You're just a sad Makem bastard" to our local team from Sunderland and they sing back "Youre just a sad Geordie bastard". It's all fun and games until someone punches a horse. 😂 British fans will get that joke. Loving your work. Merry Christmas. 🎉
😂 Merry Christmas!
Have you ever seen a makem in Milan?
@@simonn2045have you ever seen a Makem at your mums
@@joebradfield6549 unfortunately I'm related to a few makems so yes 😂
@@KingBoomerMerry Christmas I’ll tell you English football chants are the best
The best chant I’ve ever heard was Hibs fans to Hearts fans about the Hearts manager Graham Rix, who once went to prison for statutory rape, and they sang to “If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next” and swapped the word “This” with “Rix”
Close second was when the late Andy Goram reportedly had a mild form of schizophrenia and the crowd chanted “There’s only two Andy Gorams” 😂
I've always been a fan of the classic "Mesut Özil, your eyes are offside."
Casual ticket prices for football games in the UK are usual dependent on the stand/section you are in. Front row seats are usually no more than any others in that area.
Front row seat also aren’t always the best, a couple rows up on the centre line will have a better view of the hole pitch then right at pitchside
I hate front row seats. Farther back the better (to a point).
The stadium you kept stopping on was Loftus Road home to my beloved Queens Park Rangers, in West London. Front row seats are same price as others but most are taken by season ticket holders. It’s an iconic smaller ground 18,500 capacity and very close to the pitch and can have an outstanding atmosphere, just not so much recently because we’ve been about as shyte as shyte gets. It’s character building supporting a rubbish team, it makes the victories, when they come, that much sweeter.
west London is Rs
The reason i like your channel is that both king and queen boomer understand our culture especially our humour and don't make an issue out of our surface differences. You're welcome here anytime.
To quote Edmund Blackaddder 'You utter creep.'
I’m actually a Bristol city fan and I was at every match that included them in the vardys wide is a grass chant he later scored a penalty and ran the entire pitch to celebrate infront of us
When Disco Biscuits were invented the fall in football hooliganism in the UK fell dramatically
Who the fuck is pilling at footy matches?!!! 😂😂😂
@@MCBaldyPThey weren’t taking pills at matches necessarily but at clubs and raves when they would come across each other and instead of fighting were all loved-up.
very true,but then,that was what it was invented for,and it worked...
Geordie pronounced as a J isn’t a derogatory term but you got the city right. Rebekah Vardy leaked information about another high profile player’s wife and then when the other wife exposed her, she took her to court for defamation but lost.
My favourite chant whenever you play against Grimsby*: "Does your daughter stink of fish?"
*Grimsby is a fishing town.
Context for the Jamie Vardy chant:
His wife was found to be selling stories to tabloid newspapers based on stuff she had found out from other girlfriends of other footballers
Aston Villa Football Club, commonly referred to as Villa, is a professional football club based in Aston, Birmingham, England. The club, founded in 1874, competes in the Premier League, the top tier of the English football league system. I think this club is Walsall Football Club. Walsall Football is a professional association football club based in the town of Walsall, West Midlands, England. not too far from the Villa.
Pretty certain the team in Blue is Birmingham City 😂
It was blues in pre season
@@williamphillips0769 ok cheers and up the Villa.😃
Ticket prices vary massively depending on the level of the game. I have got front row seats at Wembley for £40 for an England Friendly.
For most league games in the Premier league you would pay between £40-100 for general admission. Generally I like to sit quite high up rather than the front row as you get a much better view of the game.
I'm pretty sure I paid 2x £60 for really good seats at Wembley but not in the front row. It was the England Lionesses vs Brazil in the 2012 Olympics. We won 1-0.
Yeah, front row is full of kids with signs nowadays. Get a ticket near the top and get a proper view of the game.
Was going to grab a ticket to England Malta a few months ago I couldn't believe they were charging 70 quid for a ticket
Bizarrely, there used to be a purpose built football stadium here called The Baseball Ground, Derby County used to play there, they have a new place now. I think the name derives from people playing base ball, or as we call it now "rounders", there previously. Base ball features in Jane Austen's "Northanger Abbey" published in 1818.
2023/24 refers the football season which runs from August to May.
The Yaya Touré chant is to a song called No Limits by a band called 2 Unlimited.
Front row seats are often cheaper than ones higher up the first tier of the stadium because all you can really see is legs running around and it’s also more open to the rain blowing in because the roof doesn’t cover the pitch itself only the stand!
Geordies are from Newcastle, but the word 'Geordie' is not derogatory, quite the opposite in fact.
Hey KB, if you ever make it to the UK, you should come to Nottingham in the Midlands (the Midlands is the centre bit of England) we have two football clubs, Nottingham Forest with a stadium (The City Ground) right on the banks of the River Trent, and very near to Trent Bridge which is a world class cricket ground. The second football club is Notts County who are the 4th oldest club in the world, they play at a ground called 'Meadow Lane' just over the river from Forest. Both clubs are steeped in history and worth a visit....Happy Christmas to KB, QB, PB and all the Muppets on here!
Agreed. Notts County are the oldest professional association football team in the World.
At my local club Walsall, a league two club, the front row seats are actually cheaper than the ones in the top row at the back. Normally £21-25 for front row depending on the match (normal league is 21, fa cup where it's normally packed, especially if we're in like the 3rd or 4th round, it'd be 25) and the back row would be £25-30.
It's ok the laugh at anything. "You don't choose what you laugh at, it's a response, another part of you might say what the fk are you laughing at that for later." - Jimmy Carr
No wonder no one turns up, who wluld pay that much to watch walsall
@@samuelpinder1215 I know right. We're shit this season, I'm even worried about relegation already.
Tickets are usually pretty similarly priced. You generally don't get to pick where you sit, most bigger clubs have season tickets and they take up most of the prime seating, with the rest going on sale to the public on a match by match basis.
Most grounds have a family area with cheaper prices for youths, main stands such as the Kop (North Stand) tend to be most popular but even then the prices are usually not much more than a few pounds difference than other locations.
Obviously boxes and hospitality lounges cost more (I think you guys call them sky boxes or something)
The views in modern stadiums are usually all decent with perhaps some restricted views in older grounds. (but the tickets usually aren't sold, so you aren't likely to end up behind a pillar.
What you will find however is that clubs price tickets by catagory so for example if you play a shit team (Insert team from Sheffield here) then you are going to pay a few pounds less than say a big team like Leeds.
Grounds like the one you commented on about it being small is pretty small but it's literally surrounded by housing so there is no scope to increase size. I've been there once many years ago, it's incredibly compact inside, but the view is excellent.
I'd honestly say smaller grounds usually give a much better atmosphere. Larger teams can often be very quiet and the fans not as passionate. (Glory hunters)
Went to Anfield (liverpool last season) honestly not only were the away fans constantly out singing the home fans (to the point it was quite embarrassing) but the fans seemed more interested in capturing shit on their phones than watching the match.
So yeah go see a smaller team if you make it to the UK. Assuming you'll be in london and totally unbiased (Leeds fan) I'd say you couldn't go far wrong watching a team like Crystal Palace. (great fans) or maybe even the ground you saw, which is Loftus Road, home of Queens park rangers. (Can't say you'll be in for a footballing treat though)
I'm not a football fan, but you should check out Welcome to Wrexham - about the football team that Rob McIllhenny(?) and Ryan Reynolds bought, some of the best tv I've seen all year - lot of heart to it and it's a really good overview of Welsh/British people.
On the subject of Savile - don't forget the organisation(s) that enabled him and turned a blind eye.
And the soon to be released All Town Are We, about the team that kept them in non league for an extra season.
I've never actually seen anyone call anyone muppet in real anger or get offended by it.
it's more if your friend does something stupid "what a muppet."
You’ll only find the biggest football stadiums in Australia,
Where Aussie Rules Football is played, (otherwise known as AFL)
As Aussie Rules Football is played on the biggest pitch that any kind of sport, (for example:- Football, American Soccer, Basketball or Cricket), is played on, it is also played with 18 players on the field for each team,
Australian rules football, also called Australian football or Aussie rules, or more simply football or footy, is a contact sport played between two teams of 18 players on an oval field, often a modified cricket ground.
Points are scored by kicking the oval ball between the central goal posts (worth six points), or between a central and outer post (worth one point, otherwise known as a "behind").
During general play, players may position themselves anywhere on the field and use any part of their bodies to move the ball.
The primary methods are kicking, handballing and running with the ball.
There are rules on how the ball can be handled; for example, players running with the ball must intermittently bounce or touch it on the ground.
Throwing the ball is not allowed, and players must not get caught holding the ball.
A distinctive feature of the game is the mark, where players anywhere on the field who catch the ball from a kick (with specific conditions) are awarded unimpeded possession.
Possession of the ball is in dispute at all times except when a free kick or mark is paid.
Players can tackle using their hands or use their whole body to obstruct opponents.
Dangerous physical contact (such as pushing an opponent in the back), interference when marking, and deliberately slowing the play are discouraged with free kicks, distance penalties, or suspension for a certain number of matches depending on the severity of the infringement.
The game features frequent physical contests, spectacular marking, fast movement of both players and the ball, and high scoring.
The sport's origins can be traced to football matches played in Melbourne, Victoria, in 1858, inspired by English public school football games.
Seeking to develop a game more suited to adults and Australian conditions, the Melbourne Football Club published the first laws of Australian football in May 1859.
Australian football has the highest spectator attendance and television viewership of all sports in Australia, while the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's only fully professional competition, is the nation's wealthiest sporting body.
The AFL Grand Final, held annually at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, is the second-highest-attended club championship event in the world.
The sport is also played at amateur level in many countries and in several variations.
Its rules are governed by the AFL Commission with the advice of the AFL's Laws of the Game Committee.
🇦🇺😎👍🏼
Are you allowed to use the finger in the pooper trick like Rugby Union?
As per an earlier comment Eddie Hall was born in Newcastle-under-Lyme on 15 January 1988.
Edward Stephen Hall (born 15 January 1988) is an English media personality and retired strongman. He is best known for his world-record setting 500 kg (1,100 lb) deadlift in 2016[8] which is widely regarded as one of the most important lifts in the history of strongmen.[9] He is also known for winning the 2017 World's Strongest Man competition. Wikipedia.
Muppet is no way a major insult hahah. It’s more a jokey friendly insult. Don’t listen to anyone chatting shit like that cos they ain’t right 😂
I once felt slightly insulted in 1984. But not recently
There's 3 cheltenham songs in here... I may have to go this afternoon.
It's about £10-100 for a ticket in most areas of the ground dependant on league, more for VIP sections. You don't usually want front row unless the ground is one of the few remaining with a baseball like high wall there, the view isn't ideal especially behind the goals, so they tend to be among the last sold, although kids tend to like them as there's nobody bigger blocking their way and you can usually move around a bit.
anyone who considers muppet to be a major insult is usually named Karen.
Front row isn't really a thing at football. Fans want to be in their end, where the atmosphere is. Examples include the Kop (Liverpool) and Stretford End (Man Utd). Some fans like to be at touchline level and others prefer to be a bit higher where you get more of a pitch overview
I went to see the Texas Rangers and the experience was fantastic, I asked the guy who took me there (he was from Chicago) did he want a couple of $1 hotdogs; he said yes but I don't want any vegetables, I thought why would you put carrots, cabbage or potatoes on a hotdog? I took him his hotdogs with dill pickle and he erupted " I said no vegetables" but the park was fantastic.
12:51 at Sheffield United it's £403 for a season ticket or around £34 for a match day ticket I sit right at the front behind the goal 👍🏻
Orlando has a "soccer specific" stadium, as do many other franchises Bri.
Portland's is the only OG though, built in the 1920s as opposed to the 21st century for most others.
Ticket prices tend to be based on position in the stands rather than distance from the pitch like the main stand will be most expensive but the best atmosphere tends to come from the cheaper seats if you ever come buy tickets by the away fans for the best atmosphere and avoid the dead more expensive main stands
11:33 exactly the same as it is in the back row at 99% of stadiums (I’ve only been in the back up at Manchester United , city and spurs so I can’t comment on that (away end of course))
About £30 for most teams in the football league, much more at ‘big six’ teams and can be like a tenner at non league clubs where the standard of football is quite good
Hey Your Boomership....clean-shaven for Crimbo? Love watching your expert opinions on British sport, comedy (Father Ted is hilarious) and life in general! Your majesty...have a cracking Christmas and a great New Year.
I'm a Geordie and proud of it :) it's not a derogatory term at all , it's just what people from Newcastle are known as same as people from Liverpool are known as Scousers, or Scottish known as Jocks etc :)
Same here, I'm a Geordie and proud of the toon.
I thought jocks was derogatory
@@samuelpinder1215so did i
Tyne side, the north east of England. New castle. It’s all good fun, football chants. 👍🤣👍
Depending on the team your watching it could be anywhere from £5 to £100
Smaller teams generally dont assign seats and you can sit anywhere once you're in the stadium.
Derby Countys old ground was called "The Baseball Ground" (original purpose) and that was not a pretty sight.
My team, Swansea City play in the championship (2nd division basically) on away trips we can sit anywhere, so the average ticket for away day is £35
A number of English grounds have been upgraded, or are new grounds in the last 30 years. The 92 clubs in the PL/EFL pyramid, can have a capacity of 5,000 to 74,000 at Old Trafford, and Wembley holds 90,000. Wouldn't personally sit at the front, as you are generally at pitch level.
Like your baseball our cricket has some great grounds. Kent's ground in Canterbury has a tree on the pitch.
I absolutely live to watch you cracking up, am I sad? Keep it up great stuff
Love your channel Muppet 😊
to answer the question at 11:16 the prices arent different for what row you sit in, its what stand you're on so if youre on the main stand a front row seat is the same price as a back row seat you just have to make sure to buy it before anyone else does
football tickets on the front row cost the same mainly apart from in the premier league. however they aren't regarded as the best seats. it doesnt matter how far up or down you sit. most fans either want to be by the half way line or behind the goal.
“Luis Suarez, his teeth are offside” is the greatest I’ve ever heard in 43 years of standing in freezing cold footy grounds.
The Tottenham stadium was built recently. Cost 1.3 billion pounds. Were quoted 750 million but had a few hiccups like.
I went to a baseball game in Des Moines to watch the Iowa Cubs. Three hours of my life I'll never get back, especially as at the same time Motley Crue and Alice Cooper were playing 200yds away.
Depends where you go to watch football, its from Around £20- £60 depending where you go, more expensive the higher the league
Who told you it’s a major insult in the UK 😂
Gordys are definitely from Oldcastle.
Hopes this helps!
The season runs from August to May so it's called 23 / 24 . There was a highly publicised Court case involving Vardy and Rooneys wives . The front row isn't a great place to be of its driving rain or snow under the roof . It's mainly down to availability as many grounds are sold out with season ticket holders .
Christ on a bike that Bristol chant, we , (Nottingham Forest) sang that 50 years ago against Ipswich town fans.
Yes, you can laugh at anything… as long as you start the day laughing about yourself… 😋😂😋😂😋😂😜😜😜🤣🤣🤣
Aston Villa is the club I support 3rd in the Premier League, there on fire.. there ultimately saying there a crap version of us haha
tbf, in the context of the Premier League, you erm… aren't usually 3rd.
The team was probably wearing claret and blue, hence using Villa as a comparison.
*they're
@@antskyhes a brummie, that might be a bit advanced for him
@@samuelpinder1215a southern twat by any chance?
8:25 It's another Football club that tends to vary wildly on how well they palce
It took me a while but 7:00 was playing off of Joy Division 'Love will tear us apart'.
The ground you were admiring is Loftus Road, capacity under 19k and the most expensive seat you could buy for next week is £42 - row T
Front row seat at my local club Norwich is no different from price of other home tickets, lowest 26 for adult depending on fixture, once was close to front row at Wembley for cup final that ticket was worth a grand plus (I'd won two lol)
Front row seats aren't generally the most expensive or necessarily most saught after tickets at a stadium. The most saught after seats are generally the ones that give the best balance between view of the game, leg room and distance away from people that might stab you.
I assume you are referring to main seating areas seats as opposed to being in one of the corporate boxes, in which case the better seats are probably about £80-100 and the cheaper seats will generally be between £40-80.
The corporate box seats can range from about £200 to several thousand depending on the package.
The price is the same front and back prices usually range from £20-50 depending on club status and how big the game is
I'm coming over to New York in May, already booked for Yankees v Chicago White Sox. Never watched a baseball game before but couldn't pass up visiting Yankee Stadium
Merry Christmas 🎅 🎄
The thing about UK insults is they are all completely interchangable with terms of endearment!
I've called many a mate "ya bloody wanker" in a positive light.
King boomer your videos are fantastic keep them up
We do have ticketmaster and vivid but not for football, clubs sell there own tickets on a priority basis, season tickets first, then members tickets then public sales . Public sales is if there are any left but unlikely if its Liverpool or United. General sales avarage is around £65 and first come first serve on seat locations, AXA do sell corporate tickets and hospitality seats but that big bucks lol
I have been to a Californian baseball stadium I have always wanted to see a baseball or an American football stadium abd I finally did and loved the razzmatazz of it all. I love the cheer leaders too and the candy floss I forgot what Americans call it now.😊
Prices vary depending on the league, and the team, but with Premiere League teams usually anywhere from £100 to £300 at normal stands, if you want the front row, it could be £300 to £500, if you want front row at a good angle, like behind the goal, you're probably looking somewhere over £500 and close to a thousand pounds.
Tickets for football are usually universal wherever you sit. Probably the only ground that’s differs from that is Wembley
Wishing you, the Queen and the little one a very ‘Muppet’ Christmas. Wishing you great health and happiness for 2024 too
Also the rival fans are right about Jamie Vardy’s wife but the normal responding chant is “He’s won more than you, he’s won more than you, Jamie Vardy, He’s won more than you” 😉
I can only speak for Leicester but Front row seats range between £30-£49 depending on what block you’re sitting in, what category the fixture is (category A for local derbies and ‘bigger’ clubs, Category B for others), whether you are an adult or child etc… there’s loads that go into it.
Tickets arent dear at all depending on what club you support. The club provides the tickets on their own website save using a random ticket website, i support Plymouth Argyle in the EFL Championship and they cost around £12PP for any seat including front row seat in the grandstand and for the seats in the normal stands it is for some reason dearer than the granstand, about £18PP and under 5's tend to go for free.
They’re not expensive at plymouth because it’s plymouth. If you want to go see better teams eg in the Premier League they can get expensive and depending on people with seasons tickets/memberships you might not even be able to get a ticket for a league match. Maybe for a cup game.
In the National League (5th tier of English football) I can get a ticket for £9 at my local club
Families usually sit down both sides fans who chant sit behind each goal
Front row aren’t anymore money than any other usually. Stadiums sell tickets in blocks so row 1 to row 30 in that block would be same price
Best seats are near half-way line and about 20-30 rows back. As prevoius reply states seats are priced by block. As a rule those behind the goals are less expensive.
Front row lol, it's not a theatre, generally there's a popular stand and that will be a bit more, front row in England you get soaked by rain. 😂
Yeah, "Muppet" is usually you calling out your mate when he's just done something completely stupid.
You MUppet!
Keep up the good work though sonshine, you're by far the most clued-in of the group of commentators from over yonder , the most genuine and the most palatable.
Now that I've started watching the video again, as if by magic, the point is proved. Your instant reaction to still one of the best chants around,
9:06 the BCFC one, shows how well you've done getting under the bonnet/hood of your average Brit.
I've had the displeasure of seeing this go completely over the head of other commentators.
It's only when you can sing at the top of your voice such self-deprecating abuse, that you know you're happy in your own skin.
I'd say that this is close to the root of english humour, so bravo ragazzo!
11:44 Forgive me for putting you right but it's not necessarily about being in the front row.
Yes, you're pitch side but you'll have things and people in your eyeline all the time as well as no prospect of an overview you'd get from a few rows higher.
Then there's the snob value of being in the various players' family and friends areas, the executive sections and ultimately the catered boxes and suites.
But the _best_ seats in the house are with your mates in amongst the most loyal fans, the very ones doing the chanting. As, deep down, you know by now.
No, that's not the idea.
You'd pay like £30 in the UK, we don't prioritise or overprice front row seats, all prices are very similar
Mason Mount was Born & bred In Portsmouth but was at chelsea since the age of 7/8, He did a interview with Chelsea and was asked who he supported, Chelsea or Portsmouth? His answer was Pompey (Portsmouth), all the Chelsea fans turned on him, he them left Chelsea for Manchester Utd in the Summer just to rub salt in the wounds. He still visits Pompey whenever he can.
Respect to Mason Mount !
"Oldcastle" 🤣I spat out my drink!
Mind you, it sounds like a city that should exist. It'd be better than bloody Newcastle.
Also mind you, having said that, I do like Newcastle. The one night out I had there 15 years ago, it was mental! The place was full to the brim of incomprehensible, good-looking, pissed-up slappers. And that was a Monday!
I might retire there.
Geordie, said with a J is just someone from Newcastle. it isnt an insult.
For the chant about Jamie Vardy's wife being a grass, Google "Wagatha Christie" and Wikipedia will give the background and details of the court case that was the origin for this one. (The "Wag" in "Wagatha refers to the Wives and Girlfriends of the players.)
My favourite word is flannel, whoever invented the word flannel should have gotten an award
Merry Christmas King Boomer, From Essex Chieftain Martin I (the UK). Geordies are from Newcastle-upon-Tyne (you're spot on). Aston Villa are a football club from Birmingham (West Midlands) the Second City
Aston is part of Birmingham City and Aston Villa is one of their football teams along with Birmingham City. They are currently 4th in the Premier League. Prince William supports Aston Villa.
Each stadium u will find in England will be 100 years old or older with historical architecture for example Luton town and lofted road
Usually the same price for away fans where ever you sit around £30
Aston is an area in Birmingham, I believe the Aston Martin factory was (is?) in Aston. It also has a big university.
Isn't Aston Villa an English Premier league team. I'm Australian but watch a lot of English panel shows
if you want a "front row seat" depends who u want to watch really. prices differ club to club. probably in the region of £40-£60
My personal favourite will always be the "Mesut Özil your eyes are offside, your eyes are offside, your eyes are offside." If you want to understand it, please look at his picture in Wikipedia.
I’m a Spurs fan since 1978, i wish the premier was like it was in the 70s -80s .the only real atmosphere is in the lower leagues.I really miss the old football.Everything is being Americanised with VAR and a fool playing trumpet before the game.
Showed a couple of clips of my team Millwall, the shit I hear when I go has my laughing my arse off
Not many people want to sit in the front row. If it rains you’re getting soaked.
Aston Villa are a team in Birmingham
The team being chanted at looked like Birmingham City their local rivals