Did anyone attend football matches when they were growing up?
I started going to my local non-league team's home fixtures when I was 12 or so. At that time, I think the ground was mostly or possibly all standing. The ground was about a 30 minute walk away, so I would start off at 1.30pm on a saturday to get a good position and almost always buy a programme and take a look around the club shop. There was also a club bar that was open until match time, though I was too young for that. At half-time, there was a burger van, fish and chips van, and in warmer weather an ice cream van. It was almost traditional to buy a burger or bag of chips during the interval, and that would warm you up a bit in the cold weather. There would be mid-week matches, but as they wouldn't end until 9.45pm, I would only go if I didn't have school next morning. I went to occasional away games, maybe 6 or so per season. If the away game was local, I would catch a bus, but for longer trips, there was a coach from the ground. The standard of football, as you might expect, wasn't very high, but I had some very enjoyable times and got to know men who had been going there for decades. Female fans were few and far between back then, and banter between fans and aimed at players and officials was robust, though good-natured. I attended games for 3 or 4 years, then more sporadically for a further couple of years after that.
I started going to my local non-league team's home fixtures when I was 12 or so. At that time, I think the ground was mostly or possibly all standing. The ground was about a 30 minute walk away, so I would start off at 1.30pm on a saturday to get a good position and almost always buy a programme and take a look around the club shop. There was also a club bar that was open until match time, though I was too young for that. At half-time, there was a burger van, fish and chips van, and in warmer weather an ice cream van. It was almost traditional to buy a burger or bag of chips during the interval, and that would warm you up a bit in the cold weather. There would be mid-week matches, but as they wouldn't end until 9.45pm, I would only go if I didn't have school next morning. I went to occasional away games, maybe 6 or so per season. If the away game was local, I would catch a bus, but for longer trips, there was a coach from the ground. The standard of football, as you might expect, wasn't very high, but I had some very enjoyable times and got to know men who had been going there for decades. Female fans were few and far between back then, and banter between fans and aimed at players and officials was robust, though good-natured. I attended games for 3 or 4 years, then more sporadically for a further couple of years after that.
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