Distant Doonhamer Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 Sitting watching the highlights on Sky the now. My eldest is 4 and at a wind-up stage, currently giving it "Scotland is rubbish!" and cheered when Serbia equalised there. Is it bad parenting that I intend on giving it the 'get it right fucking up ye!!' when Marshall saves the penalty? No it’s entirely appropriate. They need to learn. [emoji23] 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr. Brightside Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 Still so buzzing. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jamamafegan Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 There's a very high chance that they'll cause someone to die. Hilarious. If that's not enough, this is why we'll be locked down at Christmas. We could have Scotland playing in a tournament finals in Glasgow and not be able to be at the game. If people want to have their freedoms down the line they need to grow the f**k up and screw the nut, now.In all seriousness it’s not funny and that was a silly comment by me. The comments however are clearly from folk who don’t watch football and don’t understand the sweet release of that moment. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
forameus Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 2 minutes ago, Szamo's_Ammo said: Is your eldest @Highlandmagyar 2nd Tier by any chance? Has the wee scrote been around since we won? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djchapsticks Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 P&B has never actually seen Scotland at a major finals. Jesus! 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
accies1874 Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 DAVID MARSHALL 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Szamo's_Ammo Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 1 minute ago, djchapsticks said: P&B has never actually seen Scotland at a major finals. Jesus! Does anything in human history pre-Pie and Bovril even matter? 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gordon EF Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 13 minutes ago, 19QOS19 said: Sitting watching the highlights on Sky the now. My eldest is 4 and at a wind-up stage, currently giving it "Scotland is rubbish!" and cheered when Serbia equalised there. Is it bad parenting that I intend on giving it the 'get it right fucking up ye!!' when Marshall saves the penalty? I'd be gutted they've just outlawed smacking tbh. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ro Sham Bo Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 I don't know how folk can be arguing about that tweet or anything else for that matter. I'm sitting trying to work but just have the Davie Marshall tune in my head non stop. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
19QOS19 Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 Is a chokeslam out of the question? If so, do your thing instead Is your eldest [mention=75209]Highlandmagyar 2nd Tier[/mention] by any chance?No it’s entirely appropriate. They need to learn. [emoji23]A massive cheer and chants of "Scotland, Scotland!" didn't go down well. GIRU her! 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Tulloch Gorum Posted November 13, 2020 Popular Post Share Posted November 13, 2020 I still can't quite believe it, far less forma coherent paragraph. It's just a thousand little fragments in my head, among them: - spraying greenies around like water from a hose. Admins, gie's mair. - I was 9 when Scotland last played at a tournament, my younger brother barely remembers it. I cut my heid open on the mantlepiece jumping around when Collins scored against Brazil, and cried when Morocco scudded us. - That summer everything everywhere was Scotland-branded. I remember a pub having a window with a painting of Hendry lifting the World Cup trophy, it was just everwhere. My nephews will get that next summer. We've just missed out on all that goofy brilliant fun for so long. - Scotland are brilliant. - What exactly is it about penalties that England finds so difficult? - Every cringing yoon trying to make this about Jo feckin Swinson and how we should feel sorry for her can get in the bin. And they can stay there, because they are *not* going to like Scotish Twitter when we stuff those Morris-dancing Nigels in London next summer. - We've had decades of failure. Some of it was called glorious failure, sometimes it was utterly abject, usually it was just regular failure. Last night we didn't fail. - Football programmes on radio won't be running their traditional gloomy post-mortems. P&B won't be hosting its traditional Our Players Are Shite vs. No The Managers Are Too Shite To Get The Best Out Of Them debates that we all enjoy so very very much. - I have never been more certain of impending defeat than I was going to extra time. We had absolutely Scotlanded it with another late goal, and Serbia were all set to just run right over the top of us. Which they more or less did for the first 15. - I really wish I could read Serbian so I could rubberneck their message boards and just bask in the seethe, They must be absolutely disgusted at how they played last night, and how - with all the momentum and sprin in their step against a deflated Scotland in extra time - they couldn't land the knockout blow. From the team that did so well against Norway in the semi, that must have been hard to watch. - YASSSSS, just generally. - What a magnificent job Clarke has done. Just exactly the right man to build the team in the right way. - My family moved to Scotland in 2002. I grew up abroad, but we came back to Scotland on home leave every few years (hence being here for the '98 WC). We came back in very traumatic circumstances. It happened that the day after we arrived in Scotland was the infamous game against the Faroe Islands. We were all jetlagged and sleeping at whatever time the game was. My dad got up and put the TV on to check the score, and saw we were 2-0 down. He didn't have the heart to wake us up to watch that after what we'd been through. Scotland had entered a Dark Age. So many awful, awful games since then - 0-0 in Moldova, 0-3 in Kazakhstan, Iwelumo's miss against Norway, getting utterly turned over by Wales and Hungary, melting in Macedonia and collapsing in Georgia. The glorious highlights - France, the Netherlands, Ukraine, getting snuffed out. And now we've done it. We've done it, we've qualified and at the end of this utter sewer of a year, we've got something we can just enjoy. - I've only been to a couple of friendly matches, never a competitive Scotland game. The first was the 1-0 win over Denmark, which probably almost everyone there has already forgotten. It was a pretty a dire game, but seeing all the banners for Scotland Supporters' Clubs and pub groups from... Oban, Kirkwall, Aberdeen, Perth, East Lothian, Ayr, Lewis - it was really amazing. Those who go to national games all the time maybe take that for granted, but as someone who pretty much only sees games between Airdrie and other equally diddy teams, the feeling that you had people representing the whole country, coming from all over the place just to be there together and watch the national team was really quite powerful. And that was just a meangingless friendly, not especially well-attended or exciting. The national team really does bring the country together, and I can't wait for that happen to next summer. 24 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robin.Hood Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 Was a good feeling in work today. Usually every day working in a supermarket is a drag. But seeing more or less everyone happy about the football was just teckle 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Snobot Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 Just read the entire thread from 7pm last night onwards. Hungover to f**k. NZ in 82 was the first game I can properly remember watching. First Scotland game I went to was Switzerland in Euro 96. Got seriously pished in Bordeaux at the fan zone big screen v Noway in 98 - no tickets, accommodation or anything, we just decided to go on about 3 days notice - was behind the goal in row 6 when Hutchison scored at Wembley in 99 - spent the entire day getting pished up in Trafalgar Square and experienced the “glorious” failure we’ve become so accustomed to. Can’t wait, it has been too long and I hope to goodness people will be able to experience it in person. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DukDukGoose Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 38 minutes ago, jamamafegan said: In all seriousness it’s not funny and that was a silly comment by me. The comments however are clearly from folk who don’t watch football and don’t understand the sweet release of that moment. Nah. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Highlandmagyar 2nd Tier Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 38 minutes ago, forameus said: Has the wee scrote been around since we won? Ive been around plenty since we won. But dont let your lazy brain stop you from looking. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
velo army Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 1 minute ago, GNU_Linux said: NAP someone brings this up at first minister's questions. For those wondering Swinson is severed no more as she has a role at the Cranfield School of Management. 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. 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HoBNob Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 2 hours ago, AJF said: Except that's simply not true, is it? Even as recently as December 2018, Rangers fans made up the largest proportion of Scotland Supporters Club registered members. Really, and how would the Scotland Supporters Club know what teams it's members support? 2 hours ago, The Real Saints said: Might purchase a Scotland shirt to rile up Londoners in the pub next June. Is £60 worth it though? Good grief. Will we have a new one for the tournament? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
craigkillie Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 In honesty, I think it was a bit of an ill-advised tweet from them. It doesn't irk me as much as others, but at a time when the whole country is rejoicing and you'd like to unite fans behind the team, is using a phrase that was originally used by Clarke to antagonise one set of supporters really a good idea?It wasn't used to antagonise one set of supporters. He immediately followed it up by "and next season make it bye, bye Celtic too". 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G51 Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 2 minutes ago, Grant228 said: Really, and how would the Scotland Supporters Club know what teams it's members support? Will we have a new one for the tournament? They asked them. https://theathletic.com/2118196/2020/10/14/the-complex-relationship-of-the-rangers-support-and-the-scotland-national-team/ "Data collected by the Scottish FA in December 2018 showed that Rangers fans made up the largest percentage of Scotland Supporters’ Club Members before Aberdeen in second — there were around 24,000 total members in the last cycle." 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Venti Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 (edited) Edited November 13, 2020 by Slenderman 8 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.