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ImARam2

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Posts posted by ImARam2

  1. 2 hours ago, Gee SCREAMER !! said:

    I consider Mackworth, Breadsall, Duffield and Quarndon as very much part of Derby.

    If Duffield & Quarndon are "very much part of Derby", why do I pay my council tax to Amber Valley Borough Council, whose head office is based in Ripley?

    You'll be saying Buxton is in Manchester next!!!

    Breadsall Hill Top Estate is within the Derby City boundary, but Breadsall Village is in the Borough of Erewash. Do you know Derbyshire very well?

  2. 20 hours ago, Gee SCREAMER !! said:

    In reality your in Derby until you get your arse aways down the A6 into Makeney and into Ambergate after a few miles of not much.

    The district of Amber Valley begins going north on the A6 Burley Hill, at the entrance of Allestree Park, not in Makeney, which is not on the A6, or Ambergate, which is another 3 miles after the up-market town of Belper.

    For quite a few years, the Derby City Council have been eyeing the chance to take Quarndon into the city boundaries for all the "rich pickings" of council tax from the dozens of million pound houses that is in that village.

  3. 32 minutes ago, Gee SCREAMER !! said:

    I'm not mate, Quarndon is in Derby and the house values are higher.  Areas of Mickleover, Duffield and Darley Abbey will also be higher. Little Aston is in Litchfield. 

    Both Quarndon and Duffield villages are within Amber Valley Bourgh Council district not Derby City Council. The house prices in Duffield begin at £400k, with rentals anything from £700 to £3k per month.

  4. 1 hour ago, Ellafella said:

    the sunnier clime of Sri Lanka from where I’ll be watching tonight

    I was in Sri Lanka, on business, for the play-off final against West Bromwich Albion. I just couldn't get home and I went to virtually every hotel in Colombo to see if they were broadcasting the game and all they could show was either cricket or tennis!!

    Both my daughters were at Wembley and they were texting me every 15 minutes which had me texting and telephoning them back which cost me a fortune.

    My consolidation that day was it was one of the coldest and wettest May day in London and I was alongside a bar terrace overlooking the Indian Ocean.

    Wherever we are all in the world today lets cheer on the Rams from afar as the team gets us over the line to the Championship.

    COYR's

  5. 3 hours ago, Bob The Badger said:

    I had a season ticket for 30 years until I moved to the US. I followed Derby home and away and have stood on terraces with a handful of other Rams fans in the days in the old second division when we had nothing like the away support we have now. And home games dipped under 10k. I put on bus trips many times from Matlock and I was as loyal as pretty much anybody on this board.

    I now live in western Cornwall, and getting back for games is very difficult. Not least because the number of painkillers I have to take because I get sciatica when driving for more than an hour, is verging on suicidal.

    I freely admit I'd not want to put myself through the pain and discomfort of driving 6 or 7 hours each way for a meaningless game, so if that means 'sunshine supporter' to you, so be it. But I'm relaxed in the knowledge that I've put in my time and spent tens of thousands of pounds watching Derby on 70 different league grounds. 

    As for why I didn't buy one 4 weeks ago. That was because I had to make a choice of coming up for the Orient game or the last game, and as it was a mate's birthday this last weekend and my wedding anniversary on Saturday, we rolled the dice.

    Bob the Badger - Do you really think I'm having a go at the likes of yourself, then you are mistaken.

    I'm now in my 70's, having first stepped inside the Baseball Ground in 1962, as well as retaining my season ticket when I worked in the Middle East for 20+ years!! Oh yes, that was difficult getting back to Derby and I missed many games.

    You know as well as I do, there are so called "fans" who try to convince you that they've "never missed a game", but be unable to name a player; manager or any outstanding games which we could all recall instantly.

    Look at the scramble and arguments which arose when we last played at Wembley and "fans" were trying to get tickets for the play-off game. You mark my words, if we end up in the Wembley play-off final again, then it'll be exactly the same arguments.

  6. 43 minutes ago, TINMANTED said:

    if the records were set in the champ,i'd be with you all the way,but they havent,they have been set in a dreadful quality league

    We also won a Division 1 title with one of the lowest ever points total (2 points for win), and did you moan that season that the league was dreadful?

  7. If "fans" wanted a ticket for the last match of the season, why didn't they buy them 4 weeks ago when there were a sufficient number still  available? 

    Are these "fans" touts or just "sunshine supporters"?

    To all the fans now wanting tickets, here's a message, either buy a season ticket and you'll never miss a game, or a Wembley ticket, or you choose your game well in advance and purchase a ticket when they come online.

  8. I've already renewed my ST because no matter what division they may play in, and yes, I moan and have a go at the players from time-to-time, I've always supported my club - Derby County F.C.

    Yes, I can afford to have a ST and I understand others cannot pay out such a sum, especially with other commitments and cost of living issues, however, it doesn't matter if you only go and watch 5 or 10 matches a season, you are still a Rams fan as far as I'm concerned and whatever support you give the club, it matters.

    Championship or League 1 again, always support your club.

     

  9. I believe the official ground capacity is 32,500, however, with swathes seats being covered over for segregation purposes I doubt if the maximum will ever be more than 31,500.

    The highest Pride Park attendances have been approx. 34,000 for the England vs Mexico international and the Rams vs Rangers testimonial games which had very little, if any, segregation.

     

  10. 44 minutes ago, Ghost of Clough said:

    I think it is Barker's call

    It's not Barker's call.

    It's the match day sponsors who choose the MotM, and after the game the player, in this case Ward, comes into the Toyota hospitality suite to be interviewed by McFarland, Davies & Wilson, then have photographs with the sponsors.

    I know because I was there.

  11. 5 hours ago, Crewton said:

    Stevenage challenge comes with an underhand dig, a shove, an arm-grab or a shirt-tug, all designed to put an opponent off-balance. It's like they'd been coached by Eddie Howe. Being passive in return gets you nothing from the officials in this division.

    I'm not sure the crowd noticed on Saturday as Stevenage had a player, at every corner, standing next to Wildsmith and either baulked his movement towards the ball or was pulling his shirt as he tried to jump for the ball.

    This is a similar tactic that Arsenal having been doing this season in the Premier and has been highlighted a couple of times on MotD, especially in their win against Liverpool recently.

  12. Would two 'Blue' cards = one 'Yellow' or a 'Red' Card.

    And what happens if a player already has a 'Yellow' card and the next foul the player commits is only deemed as a 'Blue'?

  13. 6 minutes ago, ossieram said:

    You reckon football has gone backwards,  were you around in the 70's and 80's?

    The bad language and abusive chanting was on another level back then.

    Having followed Derby County for 60+ years, bad language on the terraces has always been prevalent, however, I can't recall 10,000+ fans singing and chanting vile and abusive comments about ex-players, the EFL or club directors.

    In no way am I a prude, having spent my younger days as an apprentice in a Derby factory where some of the women could and would give as good as the men, and twice as scary, but quite honestly, in my mind, the language of the terraces has become abhorrent.

  14. On 06/11/2023 at 19:19, old tray boy said:

    Almost most memorable Cup tie.

    Rams v Man Utd 3rd round with Best, Charlton etc ,year around 1965 or 66 can't remember.l had queued out alnight to get a Boys end ticket all of 1 shilling and 6 pence.l gave it pride of place next to clock on mantlepiece come the day l was suffering a very heavy cold so had felt rough for a few days.Rolled out of bed and got ready for game and horror my ticket had gone ,Mam wheres my ticket for the match ? Mams reply l sold it as you are poorly and l didn't think you would be going !!!! 

    It was the first time the Rams had appeared on MOTD in front of a 33000 ish crowd ,oh and we got beat.

    Yes, I was there as well in the Boys End/Corner, having, like yourself, walked from Breadsall Hill Top, aged 13, at 4 o'clock in the previous Sunday morning, to get a ticket.

    It was January 1966 and if I remember correctly Man Utd went 3-0 up and Derby brought it back to 3-2 just before half-time.In the 2nd half, if I'm remembering this right, Denis Law scored with a back heel at the near post, at the Normanton End goal, and he said something to Reg Mathews, Derby's 'keeper, who went for him. I'm not sure if he connected or not!!

    However, this wasn't my first cup game, which was in February 1963 when Derby played Peterborough, following about 15 cancellations due to the 3 months of snow and ice we endured in the winter of !962-63.

    No central-heating them days, just extra blankets on the bed and the need scrape the ice off the windows on the inside of the house, however, that's another story in a time of long ago!!!

  15. 2 hours ago, gfs1ram said:

    January 1971.  Derby 2 Wolves 1

    Super atmosphere, the mud, that pitch and a last minute winner. Can still see John O'Hare cheesing the ball in !!

    Following the final whistle of this game there was a mass invasion of the pitch by the Wolves fans which was met by the Derby fans on the pitch with the police trying to keep them apart - I know, because I was amongst it.

  16. 2 minutes ago, The Last Post said:

    A slight difference there...it's called expectation

    Then I hope the fans can lower their expectations to a level where Derby can compete, not only on the field, but also as a trading company with a firm business structure and plan to sustain the club for many years to come.

    A club of Derby's size cannot afford to carry on being a 'boom & bust' club, irrespective of the size of its fan base or ground and training facilities.

    The money in the Premier league is just killing the lower EFL clubs, where Luton Town, will receive a minimum of £105 million for one season in the Premier, followed by another £60 million over the next 3 seasons, if and when they get relegated.

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