morecambegeek wrote:I moved to Morecambe 12 years ago, and bought a season ticket for Morecambe the same season that Michael Twiss signed. So I'm fortunate to only ever really have followed Morecambe in their successful times.
I've had a season ticket ever since, but no more. After another cold Tuesday wondering why the hell I bother turning up to watch the same old rubbish that we've been served up for the best part of three seasons, I realised that I don't actually have to, and I can spend my £220 on something I actually enjoy doing.
It doesn't please me to say this, but going to watch Morecambe is something that I feel I should do, rather than something that I want to do. To be served up that tedium after several weeks with no football at the Globe was the final straw.
I'm pragmatic - I don't expect Morecambe to win every week. I don't expect them to play like Barcelona. I realise we're a tiny fish in League 2, and I am sure Jim would rather play more attractive football that the sideways and backwards stuff we're currently getting. Survival in League 2 is the key to this club's future and that has to be the main goal.
However, I have to get something in return for my ticket - some form of enjoyment.
I'll be there on Saturday, but I'm not making the effort to get home from work, throw some food into my face and sit through another two hours of rubbish the next time we play on a Tuesday night, and next season, I won't be there at all.
It's been fun (mostly), but everything comes to an end. Hopefully I'll be back one day.
morecambegeek wrote:I moved to Morecambe 12 years ago, and bought a season ticket for Morecambe the same season that Michael Twiss signed. So I'm fortunate to only ever really have followed Morecambe in their successful times.
I've had a season ticket ever since, but no more. After another cold Tuesday wondering why the hell I bother turning up to watch the same old rubbish that we've been served up for the best part of three seasons, I realised that I don't actually have to, and I can spend my £220 on something I actually enjoy doing.
It doesn't please me to say this, but going to watch Morecambe is something that I feel I should do, rather than something that I want to do. To be served up that tedium after several weeks with no football at the Globe was the final straw.
I'm pragmatic - I don't expect Morecambe to win every week. I don't expect them to play like Barcelona. I realise we're a tiny fish in League 2, and I am sure Jim would rather play more attractive football that the sideways and backwards stuff we're currently getting. Survival in League 2 is the key to this club's future and that has to be the main goal.
However, I have to get something in return for my ticket - some form of enjoyment.
I'll be there on Saturday, but I'm not making the effort to get home from work, throw some food into my face and sit through another two hours of rubbish the next time we play on a Tuesday night, and next season, I won't be there at all.
It's been fun (mostly), but everything comes to an end. Hopefully I'll be back one day.
marky No.1 wrote:Sums up everything, no crowd, no sponsors turning up etc etc.
mrpotatohead wrote:Be careful what you wish for kenh, with no money, and the usual scramble for the better players between clubs who do ha e a quid or two, the squad next year is not going to get better is it.?
Shrimpy wrote:Only a change in ownership of the club and someone in the board room showing some enthusiasm will renew my interest.
The club is dying a slow death at the moment and that won't change until we get a new owner.
mrpotatohead wrote:So lets look at the selling pitch, A football club for sale, new build, freehold, approx 6 million pounds, annual turnover 2.5 million pounds,trading at an annual loss of around 400.000 pounds, scope for improvement is infinate , as at the moment 97% of the local population are an ''untapped'' market.
Get the club on ebay and they'll be queuing around the block to buy it!
Shrimpy wrote:mrpotatohead wrote:So lets look at the selling pitch, A football club for sale, new build, freehold, approx 6 million pounds, annual turnover 2.5 million pounds,trading at an annual loss of around 400.000 pounds, scope for improvement is infinate , as at the moment 97% of the local population are an ''untapped'' market.
Get the club on ebay and they'll be queuing around the block to buy it!
The football club will never run at a profit (very few do), it needs an owner with deep pockets who wants to be here for the fun of it and is willing to put his own money into it such as Piley at Fleetwood or the new bloke who has taken over at Accrington.
Despite all the things you've mentioned above the biggest stumbling block to any potential buyers will be the insistence of the current owner to be repaid a large amount of money he's ploughed into the football club over the years as opposed to the chairman at Bolton for example who is prepared to write off all the money he's owed providing someone suitable comes forward to take the club on.
friedshrimp wrote:I am surprised Geek chose last night to say enough is enough. I thought there were genuine signs of good football going forward with Barkhuizen, devitt and miller creating good movement. I went to York and did wonder why i bother afterwards but last night I felt things were looking good at times. The substitutions suggested that Jim was going for it but then the injuries scuppered that. I thought last night was ok, the same result that liverpool got against them!
I have been watching morecambe for 20 years like geek, and have often wondered why I bother. I bet most fans think that at some point- but surely not last night. I feel motivated to go back on saturday.
friedshrimp wrote:I am surprised Geek chose last night to say enough is enough.
goneshrimping wrote:I thought we were great in patches, Barky was unplayable at times.
Gone_Shrimping wrote:I think that the club need to look at the pricing policy maybe this season but certainly in good time for next season. The Omega Stand has very poor facilities compared with the PMG and yet the difference in price compared with the C and E sections in not huge when you consider that the punters in the PMG can go in a covered concourse at half time for their refreshments and watch Sky TV.
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