mr_nool wrote:PrezIke wrote:Wonderwall wrote:This fella has gone to the length of saying what
http://www.thedaisycutter.co.uk/2016/04 ... -disgrace/?
Howard Hockin commented on media bias towards City in his weekly editorial for the BM podcast for about 10 minutes, and went over several of the same issues quite well, showing how ridiculously inconsistent and biased the coverage is:
http://bluemoon-mcfc.co.uk/podcast/epis ... 2-Hoop.mp3
I imagine he often has a good point, but I'm rarely able to keep my focus long enough to find out.
He surely must be tha man with the most boring voice in world history.
Agreed on his voice, and delivery. It surely is not even close to radio-quality, but the content is usually good.
I think one important variable he left out about why the other big clubs before us are so celebrated is the impact of the FIFA video game franchise on developing a fanbase.
I admit, it helped me learn about European/World football far more than the Internet did, and I am gathering this is the same for many Yanks who became supporters of Arsenal, United, Liverpool and Chelsea. Most video game players who don't have a favourite club choose the best clubs to play the game so you can win. You don't pick Blackburn or Leeds when you don't know any of their players, unless you are a rare type of video gamer.
You pick the clubs with the 4 1/2 or 5 star ratings so you can win, and play the stars you know from the World Cup or European Championships you saw on telly, which was the only real way to see these players "live" other than if you paid huge sums to go to a summer tour match some big clubs started then. The WC has been broadcast here since 1994, and the Euros in 2004, I believe was the first time. All of those clubs came into their peaks during those years whilst we were clearly not.
The FIFA video game series, however, must be helping our fanbase grow now, although I could see the way the newer version keeps actual injured players out of the squad if you are connected online being something that hurts us since we are constantly losing our best players to injury (I played with my 5 year old nephew as my brother in law has the game -- I don't -- who played as us a few weeks ago, but there was no KDB, no Kompany, no Sterling, etc.) Pro Evolution, which I recall was preferred by quite a few for being more realistic, was not sold in the U.S. for a long time, but FM is clearly a game that has grown in popularity, yet is not really for the casual fan.