ezz wrote:Was that the defining moment that made you a shrimp BS?
I know it was a long time ago, but it'd be excellent if you could remember any godlike intervention that helped us along the way to get to the final.
The amount of times I hear commentators say 'that moment could change their season' is annoying as it generally isn't for anything special anymore.
bigreddog wrote:THE defining moment for me watching Morecambe was boxing day 2006. We'd been a bit up and down form wise, and had been skipping in and out of the play off places. We went to Southport that day in hope more than expectation, and were 1-0 down at half time and a man down due to Perks being sent off. It was all going a bit pear shaped to be honest.
But on and off the pitch there was no giving up. The fans got right behind the team and the team showed the kind of character and bottle that for me has typified the McIlroy years. we went on to win the game with a late winning goal from some bloke called Yates and even though some of the results in the following months were far from perfect the never say die attitude and the belief we got from that result got us, in my opinion, into the play-offs, into the final and into the frame of mind that couldn't care less that we went 1-0 down at wembley to a team we'd had a terrible record against. The rest, as they say, is history.
It will, for me, be a game that lives long in the memory. Not for the result, but for the seeds that it planted for future success.
RedRedWine wrote:It was literally the last kick of the game...
Keith wrote:[
Pivotal moment? Away at Colwyn Bay, stuck on 99 goals but promotion to the Conference beckoned.
shrimper wrote:Keith wrote:[
Pivotal moment? Away at Colwyn Bay, stuck on 99 goals but promotion to the Conference beckoned.
And I'd taken a big, home-made board with 100 on it to hold up when the goal went in.
It didn't, we got the vital point and I used the two zeros from the board to hold up at the end. And we did a conga right round the perimeter of the ground in days when we could.
bigreddog wrote:THE defining moment for me
marky No.1 wrote:Is'nt it lovely when we all get together for a group hug
Great memories for a lot of people here
For me, away from the playing surface, a baby boy was born on May 17th 1863 to make it all possible
... and like a Phoenix from the Ashes a new era is taking place on Westgatebigreddog wrote:THE defining moment for me
No Darren! Your defining moment was renaming your quiz team last night
Have you got out of jail yet?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ghsuk6Gi ... re=related (Over 18's please)
bigreddog wrote:THE defining moment for me watching Morecambe was boxing day 2006. We'd been a bit up and down form wise, and had been skipping in and out of the play off places. We went to Southport that day in hope more than expectation, and were 1-0 down at half time and a man down due to Perks being sent off. It was all going a bit pear shaped to be honest.
But on and off the pitch there was no giving up. The fans got right behind the team and the team showed the kind of character and bottle that for me has typified the McIlroy years. we went on to win the game with a late winning goal from some bloke called Yates and even though some of the results in the following months were far from perfect the never say die attitude and the belief we got from that result got us, in my opinion, into the play-offs, into the final and into the frame of mind that couldn't care less that we went 1-0 down at wembley to a team we'd had a terrible record against. The rest, as they say, is history.
It will, for me, be a game that lives long in the memory. Not for the result, but for the seeds that it planted for future success.
Keith wrote:RedRedWine wrote:It was literally the last kick of the game...
Not so, there was still time to kick off and for a Chesterfield player to get sent off. I don't think I've spoken to any Morecambe fan who was behind the goal who remembers seeing the sending off or what led up to him going!
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot] and 4 guests