Abbo wrote:Personally i would feel a bit naffed off, i pay my £17 for me and my lad to get in then more on refreshments etc. Why should people be allowed in for free when once inside they mat not spend any money. As has been posted on loads of times why cant the club have some sort of familly promotion for the last home games ?????????????
Gnasher wrote:Family tickets are on sale - 2 adults and 2 kids for 25 quid, a saving of 9 quid.
IIRC, they have to be bought from the club shop before kick-off. In the back of my mind I'm thinking it's upto half an hour before kick-off but I'm not 100% sure about that.
marky wrote:I would would guess a few of them, like myself, move to different parts of the country when they go to uni. It so happens that I liked Newcastle so much that I stayed here and so don't get to as many games as I'd like (would would be every home game as opposed to 5 or 6 a season). It's been said before but the club really does need to reach out to the Polish community.
sgt major wrote:Sorry mate, dont agree with comments regarding the Polish community - they dont hardly support anything local and spend all their money in Polish shops. They send lots of their money to Poland and very rarely venture into local businesses.
I'm sure this will offend the bleedin heart liberal brigade but that is just the way it is.
sgt major wrote:Sorry mate, dont agree with comments regarding the Polish community - they dont hardly support anything local and spend all their money in Polish shops. They send lots of their money to Poland and very rarely venture into local businesses.
I'm sure this will offend the bleedin heart liberal brigade but that is just the way it is.
marky wrote:sgt major wrote:Sorry mate, dont agree with comments regarding the Polish community - they dont hardly support anything local and spend all their money in Polish shops. They send lots of their money to Poland and very rarely venture into local businesses.
I'm sure this will offend the bleedin heart liberal brigade but that is just the way it is.
What have you done to make them welcome? I'm not suggesting this of you, but whenever I've been back to Morecambe I've witnessed quite a lot of resentment towards the community and it doesn't surprise me they'd therefore keep to themselves. Different possibly, but there is a small Polish community making a home in Newcastle and I've already seen a large number of them with Newcastle United hats & scarves on. Football is an international entity. The local pub near a railway bridge isn't.
marky wrote:sgt major wrote:Sorry mate, dont agree with comments regarding the Polish community - they dont hardly support anything local and spend all their money in Polish shops. They send lots of their money to Poland and very rarely venture into local businesses.
I'm sure this will offend the bleedin heart liberal brigade but that is just the way it is.
What have you done to make them welcome? I'm not suggesting this of you, but whenever I've been back to Morecambe I've witnessed quite a lot of resentment towards the community and it doesn't surprise me they'd therefore keep to themselves. Different possibly, but there is a small Polish community making a home in Newcastle and I've already seen a large number of them with Newcastle United hats & scarves on. Football is an international entity. The local pub near a railway bridge isn't.
RedRedWine wrote:Crowds will pick up when the team starts climbing the league, or we have a game against either a local side, or a big-ish name.
What the club does not do very well is market itself to the general public. Take the bus idea for example. You'd assume that it would increase the exposure of the club locally, possibly even enable the club to advertise the next home game on the front or back of the vehicle. Yet it is a group of supporters who has done all the leg work in getting this idea off the ground.
We also have a problem (like most clubs IMO) in that we lose a large number of fans when they reach their late teens. People leave the area for various reasons, or suddenly take on new responsibilities and I can see how supporting a team becomes less of a priority. When I first started attending regularly about 10 years ago I used to go with a group of about 10 lads. Now that's down to 2 or 3, yet when it's Boxing Day that number soon picks up again. Why is this? Clearly an interest in the club is still there. Is the jump between in price between 16 and adult too steep?
I've always noticed that we have a conveyer-belt of teens following the side (probably due recently to the excellent free season tickets for kids starting high school, and the work done by the football in the community scheme), only for for large pockets of them to fall away once their voice breaks. Is it just a case of adolescence and that 'can't be bothered Britain' attitude setting in? I'm not sure it is. At the moment there is a group of around 30 youths at the top of the North Stand, like them or loath them they do a great job supporting the side and its clear to me they have a great enthusiasm for the club. I've even noticed a few of them starting to attend away games this year. The club need to look at a way of maintaining and increasing that interest or what happened to my group of mates could easily happen to them.
sgt major wrote:marky wrote:sgt major wrote:Sorry mate, dont agree with comments regarding the Polish community - they dont hardly support anything local and spend all their money in Polish shops. They send lots of their money to Poland and very rarely venture into local businesses.
I'm sure this will offend the bleedin heart liberal brigade but that is just the way it is.
What have you done to make them welcome? I'm not suggesting this of you, but whenever I've been back to Morecambe I've witnessed quite a lot of resentment towards the community and it doesn't surprise me they'd therefore keep to themselves. Different possibly, but there is a small Polish community making a home in Newcastle and I've already seen a large number of them with Newcastle United hats & scarves on. Football is an international entity. The local pub near a railway bridge isn't.
I did make all the Polish families welcome when I first took over but since then my dealings with them have been to chuck them out for harrasing girls and attempting to steal my beer glasses - I know Morecambe folk are as bad as this sometimes but I just get a wall of silence when I catch them out and ask for an explanation. BTW if you want to see loads of Child benefit going back to Poland just go and stand in the que in Lloyds any day of the week.
Maybe you would like to carry on this conversation in the local pub near the railway bridge sometime and I can show you the street where we DO get trouble from our Polish community.
Crooky MFC wrote:We are winning games now, and the crowd should slowly start to go up again. 1800 yesturday with only 100 or so Chester fans.
sgt major wrote:marky wrote:I would would guess a few of them, like myself, move to different parts of the country when they go to uni. It so happens that I liked Newcastle so much that I stayed here and so don't get to as many games as I'd like (would would be every home game as opposed to 5 or 6 a season). It's been said before but the club really does need to reach out to the Polish community.
Sorry mate, dont agree with comments regarding the Polish community - they dont hardly support anything local and spend all their money in Polish shops. They send lots of their money to Poland and very rarely venture into local businesses.
I'm sure this will offend the bleedin heart liberal brigade but that is just the way it is.
Keith wrote:I think we should be attempting to attract the Polish community (and Asian too). Poles have a history of being football fans and demographics suggest the Asian communities are becoming much more football orientated.
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