Billy Blaggs
Flacco of the Blaggs tribe
We're the best.
Real Madrid's average home attendence tends to fluctuate between 68,000 to 78,000 depending on how well they are playing that season. Barcelona had an average home attendence of 83,749 last season, more than either United or Madrid. I still don't think we are the biggest club in the world though.If you want more concrete evidence, look at the numbers. Domestically, Madrid rarely sellout and United have a higher average attendance despite a smaller stadium.
24 countries actually, not 50. And I would like to see your source for the bolded claim above.Globally, United have 200 supporter clubs in 50 countries; Real Madrid have 6. There really is no contest in terms of fans.
Well I've personally met all three groups while the Madrid fans I've met outside of Spain are usually Ronaldo fanboys who catch 5 games a season.
If you want more concrete evidence, look at the numbers. Domestically, Madrid rarely sellout and United have a higher average attendance despite a smaller stadium. Globally, United have 200 supporter clubs in 50 countries; Real Madrid have 6. There really is no contest in terms of fans.
Real Madrid's average home attendence tends to fluctuate between 68,000 to 78,000 depending on how well they are playing that season. Barcelona had an average home attendence of 83,749 last season, more than either United or Madrid. I still don't think we are the biggest club in the world though.
Borussia Dortmund have an average attendance of 80,520 - a higher sellout rate than even United. Does that make Dortmund the most popular club in the world?
This argument doesn't hold up very well.
24 countries actually, not 50. And I would like to see your source for the bolded claim above.
"Real Madrid has more than 1,800 club-affiliated supporters’ groups called peñas all around the world with approximately 174 million members."
If your argument is that the average league game for Manchester United has higher viewing figures than Real Madrid or Barcelona, then yes that is true. The Premier League is more popular than La Liga, I'm not going to deny it. That does not however mean that Manchester United is bigger than Real Madrid or Barcelona.
The Champions League is a bigger than any domestic league. It's the most prestigious trophy in club football, and Real Madrid absolutely dominate Manchester United in that competition. 11 European Cups to 3, and they've won just about every relevant encounter in the past 20 years or so (2000, 2003, 2013).
Barcelona have 5 European Cups to United's 3, and we've won our 2 most recent encounters in the final. Don't you think those two finals in 2009 and 2011 had an effect on the perception of the casual football fan? I feel that, in the eyes of the public, we became a bigger club than you at Wembley 2011.
United are a huge club globally, no doubt about it, but I simply cannot agree with the "biggest club in the world" claim. It doesn't hold up to scrutiny.
I'd be very surprised if Real only have 6 supporters clubs worldwide. Even City have loads more than that and many of them pre-date the 2008 takeover but we're nowhere near as big as Real Madrid.
In any case, I don't see why numbers of fans/supporters clubs worldwide should be the only barometer when deciding which club is the biggest. Who has the most fans in Ulan Bator or wherever, while discounting other significant things like trophy count is silly, and when it comes to trophy count Real comfortably win out on that. Also, implying that Real's non-Spanish fans are fairweather fans while United's aren't is equally silly as every club has fairweather fans and a case could easily be made that United have as many as Real, if not more. Real Madrid, Barcelona, and United are all huge clubs in their own right with huge support bases.
Tell you something though, I did a tour of the Bernabeu in 2012 when I was over in Madrid for a few days. The trophy room was very impressive but the room where the manager held his press conferences (Mourinho at the time) was shocking - the carpet under the manager's chair was literally threadbare![]()
You are fecking kidding me right? I have no connection to Manc whatsoever besides me dad going there some times due to work and popped in to see Best Law and Charlton cause United were his favourite team. I love Manchester United more than any sports team in the world but that is the only connection that I have to Manc. I go there only once a year since I can't afford going more but I see every game on TV. Supported them since the late 70s and Coppell used to be my hero. I don't feckin understand this shit you are talking about. The important thing to me is that you don't support any other team as much (most of my mates who claim they are Unitedfans supported Gothenburg in 94). You can have a 2nd team by all means but if anyone asks you who you support it should be the same answere because to me you can only support one team wholeheartedly. My second team is Djurgården here in Sweden but if United played them I wish they beat them 10-0. One love. It doesn't matter where you from (atleast to me) it's about supporting in good and bad times (and to me ONE LOVE)
I live just outside Newcastle now and refuse to let my kids support City, if they were still shit I wouldn't have a problem but I'm not having them grow up a glory hunter, he can support Newcastle or Sunderland.
I've loads of mates up here who are United fans, the one reason that people get pissed off with United up here is the self righteous gloating of the glory hunters when they hammer one of the local clubs, same with 'pool fans, loads of them all from the glory years though with kids there are less United and Liverpool fans now, most appear to support the local clubs, you see hardly and kids wearing 'successful' clubs colours, actually see more Barca and Madrid tops on kids than United or Liverpool.
It's true though. The more honest rival fans have been happy to admit it.
I don't care what you think of United.
I just find it amusing some of the rival fans bending over backwards to say anything but the real reason they don't like us.
Even that Ruffian WUM started his post by saying the number one reason we're disliked is because of our success, being a threat to Liverpool's position at the top of English football (poor sod didn't realise we've already overtaken them).
Arsenal bought more or less their entire side. United had a core of academy players and spent the money they earned wisely. I know which model I prefer.
Delusional nonsense. Ferguson won because he was lightyears ahead of anyone else. He gave referees a hard time when they fecked up but then what manager does not.
It's interesting you ignore and deflect all the talk of glory supporters including deleting the question asking if you started supporting before or after the club had it's success. It's pretty obvious you're sensitive to this as it's probably quite close to the truth.
I didn't have any issue with United either, I said I dislike glory supporters, and it's obviously hit a truth nerve with yourself.
Tell me how difficult it's been for you supporting the 3rd most successful club in the country? Cry me a river. Are you a glory supporter too or is that only reserved for the most successful club?
I've known nothing but being a United supporter. It wasn't a choice. If that was the case with you then we're the same. Though I don't spend my evenings on a Arsenal website trying to diminish their achievements with paranoid and bitter nonsense. Go figure.
I think you're a decade behind with that, pal. I supported United thru the 60s and beyond. Back then they were everyone's 2nd favourite team. (Cliched but largely true). The tide starts to turn in he 70s and went into overdrive after Fergie and success. Hoolies? United weren't the worst, we just had more than anyone else and went to other grounds and were the majority. We'd outnumber the middling clubs and only at Newcastle, Leeds and Merseyside were we well outnumbered - but even then would take 15,000'or so. It changed after Hillsboro but the resentment was established. The 67 title clincher at West Ham was like a home game and they've never forgiven us. Munich? You hear about it far more these days than you did back in the 60s. It didn't start to be romanticised until the 70s at the peak of the red Army days.
Another Salford Red, btw.![]()
Stop leading the younger fans astray.
When did United bring 15,000 to Anfield ? That would mean United having the whole Anny Road end and possibly others in the Kop or stands. I was only a kid in the 70's but would know if United brought 15,000 as stories get passed down. In the late 70's - early 80's Anfield was a no go place for visiting firms. Only United , City , West Ham and Chelsea used to put the effort in. The rest shit out . When firms did start showing up they got twatted and never showed up again until the police escort was introduced.
My only recollection of away fans being on the Kop apart from Everton ( who kicked off at the end of the game in 87/88 ) was United in the Easter game ( 3 - 3 ) in 87/88. A little firm of United where in the corner by the Kemlyn and shouted United United when youse scored. Fair play as that must of took some balls that. Anyway they got sussed obviously a few scuffles broke out and they got escorted out into the Kemlyn and round the back to the United end or maybe just kicked out by the bizzies. It may have been the latter as word went round the Kop that they were outside and a lot of little firms bounced out looking for them.
Tell me how difficult it's been for you supporting the 3rd most successful club in the country? Cry me a river. Are you a glory supporter too or is that only reserved for the most successful club?
I've known nothing but being a United supporter. It wasn't a choice. If that was the case with you then we're the same. Though I don't spend my evenings on a Arsenal website trying to diminish their achievements with paranoid and bitter nonsense. Go figure.
And there was me thinking this was a thread inviting rival fans to express their reasons - no matter how misguided and unpalatable in your opinion - for not liking United. It's not like he's deliberately signed up to this forum to take the piss.
Also, in reference to something else you said in the conversation with the Arsenal fan - there seemed to be an implication on your part that the Class of '92 were there at the start of United's successes under Ferguson yet those early trophies were won with a team that was almost entirely bought - an English record amount of money was spent by United in the summer of 1989 despite you only finishing 10th the previous season - and the Class of '92 came later once United had pretty much cemented their place at the top. So to claim Arsenal bought their trophies that were won around the same time and United did it "the right way" is misleading, especially when you look at how many academy graduates made up Arsenal's first title-winning squad for 18 years in 1989 compared to how many made up United's first title-winning squad for 26 years in 1993.
I must admit that I'm surprised the Arsenal fan didn't point this out to you. Maybe he is a 90's gloryhunter after all![]()
And there was me thinking this was a thread inviting rival fans to express their reasons - no matter how misguided and unpalatable in your opinion - for not liking United. It's not like he's deliberately signed up to this forum to take the piss.
Also, in reference to something else you said in the conversation with the Arsenal fan - there seemed to be an implication on your part that the Class of '92 were there at the start of United's successes under Ferguson yet those early trophies were won with a team that was almost entirely bought - an English record amount of money was spent by United in the summer of 1989 despite you only finishing 10th the previous season - and the Class of '92 came later once United had pretty much cemented their place at the top. So to claim Arsenal bought their trophies that were won around the same time and United did it "the right way" is misleading, especially when you look at how many academy graduates made up Arsenal's first title-winning squad for 18 years in 1989 compared to how many made up United's first title-winning squad for 26 years in 1993.
I must admit that I'm surprised the Arsenal fan didn't point this out to you. Maybe he is a 90's gloryhunter after all![]()
Yeah and we're still doing it. Should we in some way be ashamed that we'd rather invest our self made money in our team than become some property investment portfolio like Arsenal![]()
Terry Phelan Wimbledon £2,500,000 25 Aug, 1992
Steve Finney Preston Free 12 Feb, 1993
Alan Kernaghan Middlesbro £1,600,000 20 Sep, 1993
Carl Griffiths Shrewsbury £500,000 29 Oct, 1993
David Rocastle Leeds £2,000,000 22 Dec, 1993
Uwe Rosler Dyn Dresden £750,000 02 Mar, 1994
Paul Walsh Portsmouth £750,000 10 Mar, 1994
Peter Beagrie Everton £1,100,000 24 Mar, 1994
City spent £9.2mil in season 93-94.
This was a record as well.
Don't see City fans mentioning this much.
Atta boy @Magnus you tell 'im!You are fecking kidding me right? I have no connection to Manc whatsoever besides me dad going there some times due to work and popped in to see Best Law and Charlton cause United were his favourite team. I love Manchester United more than any sports team in the world but that is the only connection that I have to Manc. I go there only once a year since I can't afford going more but I see every game on TV. Supported them since the late 70s and Coppell used to be my hero. I don't feckin understand this shit you are talking about. The important thing to me is that you don't support any other team as much (most of my mates who claim they are Unitedfans supported Gothenburg in 94). You can have a 2nd team by all means but if anyone asks you who you support it should be the same answere because to me you can only support one team wholeheartedly. My second team is Djurgården here in Sweden but if United played them I wish they beat them 10-0. One love. It doesn't matter where you from (atleast to me) it's about supporting in good and bad times (and to me ONE LOVE)
I always fancied myself a rather handsome chap, but now I know I'm not because "Ruffian" has declared it so2. Your fans are the nastiest supporters I've ever encountered. I'm talking en masse here. Arrogant, entitled, obnoxious, deeply and viciously ugly and violent. You may have decent individuals, but whenever you come together you behave like twats.
We definitely got the sympathy vote from most neutrals & the resurgence of Sir Matt to build a team good enough to win the league in'67 followed by the European Cup in '68, just 10 years post Munich was remarkable and appreciated by all but a few.I think you're a decade behind with that, pal. I supported United thru the 60s and beyond. Back then they were everyone's 2nd favourite team. (Cliched but largely true).
I must say I too started to feel more animosity on the terraces in the late 60's. Before that I was taken to games with dad where we'd stand in the paddocks & I don't recall much in the way of trouble or even bad language in the songs? And because dad married a Londoner that included matches away at places like Fulham & West Ham. By the late 60's and early 70's it was more about Leed's & Revie's bullies. We sang derogatory songs about Citeh of course & they were still more the rival as expected, while Shankley's Liverpool had just arrived after being promoted just before our 63' cup FA win. They enjoyed some success in the 60's it must be said, but I only remember singing the "you'll never walk again" song. As the mid 70's rolled around that changed!The tide starts to turn in he 70s and went into overdrive after Fergie and success.
You're right; I remember away games at places like Forest & Blackpool and there being enough of us at the ground early enough to "take their stand" but wouldn't even think about it at Maine Rd, St James or Anfield and the like. There were however, always enough of us to be the dominant force at the "away end" at just about any other club and like now, away attendance records were always the highest when Utd came to town. As for 15,000 ... hmmm that seems like a lot? OT held I think 61,000 in 1970 and the Stretty probably had about 20,000 of us standing. If 15,000 supporters were travelling they wouldn't all be the type to try & get into the "wrong end". The exception maybe would be games in London where there were / are huge numbers of "Cockney Reds". That's the reason for the dominance at Upton Park in '67.Hoolies? United weren't the worst, we just had more than anyone else and went to other grounds and were the majority. We'd outnumber the middling clubs and only at Newcastle, Leeds and Merseyside were we well outnumbered - but even then would take 15,000'or so. It changed after Hillsboro but the resentment was established. The 67 title clincher at West Ham was like a home game and they've never forgiven us.
Munich? You hear about it far more these days than you did back in the 60s. It didn't start to be romanticised until the 70s at the peak of the red Army days.
Another Salford Red, btw.![]()
Can't say when it first started but around 1973/4 a Liverpool fan told a snarky joke about it to me.We definitely got the sympathy vote from most neutrals & the resurgence of Sir Matt to build a team good enough to win the league in'67 followed by the European Cup in '68, just 10 years post Munich was remarkable and appreciated by all but a few.
I must say I too started to feel more animosity on the terraces in the late 60's. Before that I was taken to games with dad where we'd stand in the paddocks & I don't recall much in the way of trouble or even bad language in the songs? And because dad married a Londoner that included matches away at places like Fulham & West Ham. By the late 60's and early 70's it was more about Leed's & Revie's bullies. We sang derogatory songs about Citeh of course & they were still more the rival as expected, while Shankley's Liverpool had just arrived after being promoted just before our 63' cup FA win. They enjoyed some success in the 60's it must be said, but I only remember singing the "you'll never walk again" song. As the mid 70's rolled around that changed!
You're right; I remember away games at places like Forest & Blackpool and there being enough of us at the ground early enough to "take their stand" but wouldn't even think about it at Maine Rd, St James or Anfield and the like. There were however, always enough of us to be the dominant force at the "away end" at just about any other club and like now, away attendance records were always the highest when Utd came to town. As for 15,000 ... hmmm that seems like a lot? OT held I think 61,000 in 1970 and the Stretty probably had about 20,000 of us standing. If 15,000 supporters were travelling they wouldn't all be the type to try & get into the "wrong end". The exception maybe would be games in London where there were / are huge numbers of "Cockney Reds". That's the reason for the dominance at Upton Park in '67.
I was no hooligan and certainly not a skin (long hair & prog rock was my schtick) But I'll tell ya, getting off the trains for an away game & not being afraid to wear the scarf was a feckin' rush I'll never forget!![]()
Nobody dissed Munich back then that I recall either. It was still too fresh in the mind perhaps. When did the airplane shit start exactly & by who first?
CnutCan't say when it first started but around 1973/4 a Liverpool fan told a snarky joke about it to me.
Can't say when it first started but around 1973/4 a Liverpool fan told a snarky joke about it to me.
Cnut![]()
you live in a different country, it's a totally different kettle of fish. I was brought up to believe you supported your local team or where you were from and I still believe in that as do most of my mates. I've a mate from London who is a 'spurs fan, he won't let his kids support them for the same reason. No one likes a glory hunter.
you live in a different country, it's a totally different kettle of fish. I was brought up to believe you supported your local team or where you were from and I still believe in that as do most of my mates. I've a mate from London who is a 'spurs fan, he won't let his kids support them for the same reason. No one likes a glory hunter.
I'd love for Swansea to get the unfair media coverage and refereeing performances you lot getBut hostly it's because United don't care about being hated. In fact, as people have said above, most of us revel in it. We cherish the unfair media coverage and refereeing injustices against us, and anyone who isn't openly pro-United is 'one of them.' If I had a pound for every time someone said 'if United had done that...' I'd be richer than Donald Trump.
Other clubs (Liverpool are a classic example) try to cultivate a positive image and actively court the affection of the media and the general public. United do the opposite, which is probably the best aspect of being a United supporter.
He called me King CnutThe Liverpool fan not you![]()
And there was me thinking this was a thread inviting rival fans to express their reasons - no matter how misguided and unpalatable in your opinion - for not liking United. It's not like he's deliberately signed up to this forum to take the piss.
Also, in reference to something else you said in the conversation with the Arsenal fan - there seemed to be an implication on your part that the Class of '92 were there at the start of United's successes under Ferguson yet those early trophies were won with a team that was almost entirely bought - an English record amount of money was spent by United in the summer of 1989 despite you only finishing 10th the previous season - and the Class of '92 came later once United had pretty much cemented their place at the top. So to claim Arsenal bought their trophies that were won around the same time and United did it "the right way" is misleading, especially when you look at how many academy graduates made up Arsenal's first title-winning squad for 18 years in 1989 compared to how many made up United's first title-winning squad for 26 years in 1993.
I must admit that I'm surprised the Arsenal fan didn't point this out to you. Maybe he is a 90's gloryhunter after all![]()
This.Jealousy basically
Ultimately I think it's because we're the club that people who only have a slight/vague interest in football feel they have the most affinity to and I think that irks a lot of people. People who aren't fans of any one club usually look out for our result. We're the football club for people who don't like football. The housewives' favourite. I think much of that is a relatively modern phenomenon too. People will cite the Munich air disaster and subsequent 'romance' associated with how it was rebuilt by Busby. But I think being the only club pretty much on terrestrial TV in the 90s on ITV in the Champions League is more of a factor to our casual audience/fanbase today. Which, of course, is resented.
I personally have no problem with clubs spending their own money. I respect Arsenal for self-funding their success.
I just find it odd to have a go at United for similary spending their own money. Especially when that spending was typically supplemented with a healthy dose of organic youth development, rather than simply buying an entire side. Spending your own money and bringing through youth players. If you hate a club for that, it comes across as incredibly bitter.
But then it's not that which people hate, it's the success it led too. If we'd been doing the same thing but plodding along 'doing a Spurs', no one would've passed any remarks.