Jump to content

Tulloch Gorum

Gold Members
  • Posts

    1,229
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Posts posted by Tulloch Gorum

  1. Lionel Messi is one of the greatest players - if not the greatest player - ever to play the game.  He has left many, many better players than Scott Brown on their arses and/or eating his dust over the years.
    Has Brown achieved as much from his career as he could have done?  No, probably not.  But it's not all down to ambition, someone said upthread there were difficult family circumstances that had a bearing on his decision, and if that's the case then fair play to him.  It's a job.  Nobody would think the worse of someone in any other line of work staying near their family in similar circumstances even if better career progression was on offer elsewhere.  It's a job, some things are more important than that.  He's obviously settled at a club that suits him, he's made bags of money and has a heap of medals to tell his grandkids about.  Hard to blame him too much for that.

    I'm all for players heading elsewhere where they can learn more and develop into better players - we've seen with Tierney over the last year how good it can be for them.  But at the end of the day these are guys with a job, and like everyone in every job the choice to move or stay put has a lot of factors to consider.

  2. Oh, you get that on the Airdrie thread as well.  I imagine all clubs have that going on around them.

    Hutton is a good signing for you.  His judgement at crosses can be a bit suspect at times, and does occasionally lose the rag if thinks he's been wronged, but a better shot stopper you could not ask for.  I think all Airdrie fans would have been happy to have kept him, but he wants regular football and nobody can begrudge him that.  He'd been replaced as first choice keeper this year, but that penalty save at Celtic Park in the Cup has made him something of a cult hero.

  3. We all miss seeing our clubs, we all miss seeing the regulars at the games.  We all spent time on Christmas talking to on the phone to family who would otherwise have been there, we'll all be doing the same again on Hogmanay and Ne'er Day.  We've all ploughed thousands into our clubs over the years, I'm sure.  I miss going to the cinema, I miss going to my church, I miss going to parents' for tea every few weeks, I miss visiting my friends.  We all do.  But we all have make sacrifices because there's a highly contagious disease spreading like wildfire that's killed thousands in this country already, and it's better to miss those things than to lose them forever because of Covid.  So we grumble a bit, we pay for our livestreamed games and we put up with it on the understanding that if everyone does, then we have those things back sooner or later.  It needs trust and solidarity across the country or it doesn't work.  It needs trust and solidarity or it's just millions of people feeling lonely and miserable for no reason.


    Before he decided that the breathing binfires that are union flag twitter das were the easiest group to grift and he decided to fully embrace reactionary nationalism, George Galloway was something of a socialist.  He's probably given a few speeches about solidarity in his time.  But he's behaving just like the Marquis of Bute here, who has just been in the news for hosting private parties.  They're indistinguishable, really - they're big and (self) important, so the rules that apply to everyone else don't apply to them.  And for some bizarre reason we should be grateful to them for it, and not be so rude as to question it. 

    And that's before getting to that club statement, which is just atrocious.  When a team is doing that badly on the park, its board need all the goodwill from the fans they can get.

  4. Clyde were absolutely dire today.  In the first half they did have the wind to contend with, but they were so sloppy at the back that had it been a still day we'd still have been ahead.  From the time we scored our first to their first they barely got a kick of the ball.  Therir defence was comical, with two bad backpasses that nearly let in our strikers, and another from about thirty yards out that went for a corner - and that's without account of the goals.  The first and third were pretty spectacular from an Airdrie point of view, but nobody should be letting in goals direct from corners, and the amound of time and space Kerr had was pub-league stuff.  Given Airdrie's habit of late collapses in recent years I wasn't all that comfortable being just two goals up going into the final stages, but bar a brief flurry of corners and free kicks following their second goal Clyde never looked like mounting much a serious late effort and seemed to have pretty much given up by the last ten.  i don't know what scope Clyde have for strengthening in January, but they'll be really struggling if they don't, especially at the back.  No senior team should be losing those kinds of goals, and certainly not nine goals in two games to an Airdrie side who are decent going forward but hardly prolific.

    For us, I thought Thomson had a decent game, though the conditions made the second half a bit of a slog for us going forward.  It's good to see Roy back as well, especially if Connell ends up going back to Kilmarnock.  Granted they were mostly friendlies, but Roy had hit a good run of form before his injury, and competition for places can only be a good thing. 

    My stream had frozen when Clyde got their second - can anyone give a good description of it?

    Having gotten ourselves into a really strong position we did let Clyde get if not back into the game at least within touching distance of it, but really we saw the second half out pretty much as comfortably as could be managed in that wind.  I dread to think how much worse the conditions would have been before the building at the formerly open end was put up.  It would have been nigh-unplayable in the days before the South Stand.

  5. I don't really see what there is to argue about with this draw.  Denmark and Austria are obviously better than us, but if we ever want to get to a World Cup again - and do anything worthwhile once there - then obviously we need to beat superior teams now and then.  If you don't think you can do that at least some of the time, during a good run that gets you a fighting chance, you're as well not playing.

  6. It's true that Roy wasn't up to much last year, but to be fair to him he had clearly hit a good run of form, albeit mostly in friendlies, before he got injured.  I would take Robert over Smith for sure, for the other new ones the jury is out for me.  Sabatini is clearly a very skillful player, but whether its the system we're playing, him not clicking with the players around him or his own limitations, he doesn't seem to have much influence on the game. 

  7. That was dire.  That's two games now with hardly a worthwhile chance created between them.  It's so frustrating because these players are clearly good enough to do so much better, it's maddening to watch the side that ran five past Clyde and blew Forfar way in the first half up there look so insipid and toothless against sides that are decent and well-organised but hardly a terrifying prospect to face.

  8. On 08/12/2020 at 09:25, Jack Reed said:

    Aye, it has been our problem for a while, so obvious hard to believe the manager did not address, feel Ryan would have come  good again and would have been worth chasing, it becomes apparent after a few games  we have not improved a few times d other positions are not as strong as other teams  like East fife on Sat, noticed that someone pointed out we signed players from championship, aye big Sean was with Brechin, they never won a game all season, and I am sorry but I think Robert is a luxury we can't afford, need a few more players to get stuck in  when we go a goal down, 

    Not sure I would agree with that.  Did he not score in three consecutive games before the EF game?  We spent most of last season bemoaning our lack of attacking creativity, he's got it in spades. 

  9. That was really poor today.  Really struggled to keep possession or do anything with it, no real creativity and hardly any serious chances created.  It's so frustrating because we have players that can do all of those things.

    This team should finish in the top four comfortably enough, but it's hard to see them being good enough consistently enough to mount any kind of serious title challenge.  Bah humbug.

  10. 14 minutes ago, velo army said:

    Also the arsehole voted to sever the livelihood of millions of poor and working poor. She can't f**k off enough.

    Back to the present. I honestly feel like I'll never be sad again. I just feel such intense joy.

    It's at moments like these that I grieve for people who aren't football supporters. They haven't the faintest idea what they're missing.

    I reckon this will be spoken about for generations to come. The significance of it, not just from a football perspective, but from a national perspective, cannot be overstated (but I could give it a good go tbf). What the team did last night was to change the narrative of what it means to not just be a Scottish Football Player of supporter, but to be Scottish. The "nearly" story that has underpinned and undermined various world cup campaigns has also informed the national psyche. We've seen this play out politically in the varied failures of independence/devolution referenda, and I don't want to get into another Yes/No debate (I'm enjoying the unity surrounding the team just now) but I see them all as a wound to the national psyche that perpetuates the narrative that we "cannae dae it".

    For anyone who has changed their own story, whether that be doing the therapeutic work of moving from a story of victimhood to one of empowerment and agency, or from a narrative of avoidance and separation to one of engagement and integration you'll know how much courage and character it takes, and how powerful the impact of the change. When we change our own story we also change the story of generations to come. A man from a long line of alcoholics who heals his own wounds will cease the perpetuation of the shame and silence which defined the men of previous generations of his family. The story of what it means to be a man in his family has been transformed.

    Last night the team decided that the story of Scotland being a team who fall at the final hurdle and choose self sabotage over success has been re-written. It's not to say that we won't fail to qualify again, or that there won't be a last minute mistake that results in heartbreaking loss. What it means is that after last night those events, should they occur, won't have as much say in how we define ourselves as they have in the past. Before last night conceding a last minute goal was "typical Scotland" as we tell ourselves that to be Scottish is to f**k up and that to be Scottish is to not sit at the banquet with all the other countries, but to look in from the outside like the street urchins we are. Last night represented a shift from that, and we all felt it. Now when we experience failure it won't be a validation of our own unworthiness, it'll be just that, a failure. An opportunity to learn and grow, and fuel for the next success.

    Deep down we all want to feel pride in being Scottish, but our own cringe has held us back. The fear that we don't deserve to enjoy success and it'll be snatched away at the last minute has held us back from truly believing in ourselves as a nation.

    I have a strong feeling that the tears that poured out of us yesterday and today are from the knowledge that things have changed irrevocably, and that we can finally give ourselves permission to achieve.

     

    Tl;dr; Birthday caird pish.

    Long out of greenies, but that was excellent.  Being at the banquet is something I can remember from '98, my brother barely can.  Just the idea that Scotland were part  of that.  Not just the actual football, at which most teams at most tournaments don't make much of an impact - but all the colourful stuff around it.  Carlos Valderrama with his eccentric hair, tiny wee Jorge Campos with his bizarre jerseys, the Romanians all bleaching their hair (when I was a student I had a girlfriend from Romania, who said that all the boys at her primary school came in with bleached hair the very next day) - well, much as people love cringing about it for some reason, the kilts and the pipes were part of that as well, just as much as samba drums and all the weird costumes and get-up folk had on at other games.  The opening game of the tournament was us against the best team in the world - for a 9-year-old me, the best team that could be imagined: Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos, Cafu, Rivaldo - they were playing against Jim Leighton and Tom Boyd and Colin Hendry and yes they beat us but we weren't disgracced at all (that came later).  The whole world was watching John Collins score a goal aginst he best team on the planet.

    And all that - along with World Cup and Scotland branding on every box of cereal and every advert and sticker books and tournament guide magazines and everything - that's all really vivid in my memory as a nine year old kid.  But that's the one and only set of memories I have like that.  Next year, granted it's the Euros and not the World Cup, I will have another set to add to them.  My nephews will experience that, though one of them is still probably too young to get much of it.   And I can't feckin wait.

×
×
  • Create New...