Seasider78
Well-known member
- Nov 14, 2004
- 6,085
Wasn't today the deadline for ST renewals? If so wonder how many actually renewed
Snidey bitch slapping aside it is worth reflecting back to the original point of this thread.
By the end of the season we will have had just over 600K fans pay for tickets for league games. That will increase to 630K if we make it into the play-offs and if you include the two cup games that increases to around 680K seats sold.
By any account that is phenomenal success and everyone from the club and its fans deserves to be given some credit. I try to have a word with a few away fans after every game about their experience and very few have anything but praise for the stadium and the way they are treated.......for the palarse game even the horses enjoyed a good day out!
People can try to criticise our fanbase as plastic all they like but the simple truth is that, given we have really not achieved anything yet to be plastic about, what our attendances actually demonstrate is that if you offer a good product people will buy-in to it. Simples!
The crowd for the Norwich QF in 83 was 28,800. Amazingly it was not all ticket and some were locked out. I remember getting in the North about 1pm and by 2pm it was full to heaving.
I went to all those and I don't remember any of them being all-ticket, simply because in those days it was such a hassle making games all-ticket (remember Derby in the Cup) and it was easier to simply lock the gates when the ground was full (Norwich in the Cup). I could be wrong of course, and it will be interesting to see if anyone else remembers. 99.99% certain the Forest game certainly wasn't as by that stage there was no demand and only 25,000 turned up anyway.Remember as well that the matches in 79/80 against Liverpool, Man U, Spurs and Forest were all ticket. If they had been POTG the crowds might have been higher.
Jeez, don't people read threads before posting? When we got into the First division our capacity was NOT reduced to 28,000. I'll repeat that, when we got into the First division our capacity was NOT reduced to 28,000. When we kicked off against Arsenal it was originally around 33,500 and there was widespread disappointment that the Arsenal attendance was only 28,604, some 5,000 below capacity. (You are correct that we never hit capacity once).Bit of both in my opinion. The Tottenham game in April 1978 had so much crowd trouble that it resulted in fencing being put up in the close season. This restricted the view for a lot of fans plus the fact that going to watch football then could be seriously dodgy.
Our average attendance in 1978/79 was considerably lower despite getting promotion to Div.1.
When we did get into Div.I - August 1979 - the Goldstone capacity was reduced to 28,000.
Despite playing, the then, top sides in Europe in Liverpool, Forest, Aston Villa and Man.Utd(!) we never seemed to hit that capacity. (Correct me if I'm wrong)
...
I thought it was reduced to the 28k no 30k in top flight
The crowd for the Norwich QF in 83 was 28,800. Amazingly it was not all ticket and some were locked out. I remember getting in the North about 1pm and by 2pm it was full to heaving.
I went to all those and I don't remember any of them being all-ticket, simply because in those days it was such a hassle making games all-ticket (remember Derby in the Cup) and it was easier to simply lock the gates when the ground was full (Norwich in the Cup). I could be wrong of course, and it will be interesting to see if anyone else remembers. 99.99% certain the Forest game certainly wasn't as by that stage there was no demand and only 25,000 turned up anyway.
Jeez, don't people read threads before posting? When we got into the First division our capacity was NOT reduced to 28,000. I'll repeat that, when we got into the First division our capacity was NOT reduced to 28,000. When we kicked off against Arsenal it was originally around 33,500 and there was widespread disappointment that the Arsenal attendance was only 28,604, some 5,000 below capacity. (You are correct that we never hit capacity once).
The capacity stayed at 33,500 almost all the way through that first season, but then just after the penultimate home game (against Middlesborough) the South Stand burned down. This originally had a terrace in the front, but when it was re-built it became all-seater which lowered the capacity. At the start of the 1980/81 season, partly due to the South Stand being rebuilt and partly due to the 1975 Safety at Sports Grounds Act, the capacity was actually as low as 24,000, but was increased as the season progressed and work was carried out.
Strange how 78/79 is way down on 77/78. There were no reductions in capacity until Summer 1979, and 78/79 saw a more successful team.
No worries, I'm just amazed at how many people glibly state that our capacity 'was reduced in 1979 to 28,000'. You're not the only offender on this thread and I've seen it before. Interestingly in the whole of the 'glory years' (well, until the South Stand burned down at the end of our first season in the top flight) the biggest crowd, was the 33,500 (i.e. the all-ticket sell-out) for the Derby County League Cup game. The next closest was the Blackpool game at the end of 77/78 with 33,431. Man U, Liverpool, Arsenal, Palace - none of them came close. All quite incredible though when you think the first game of the 76/77 season (Mullery's first) there were 'only' 13,000 there.You're right of course. Fading memories and all that. It was during the close season that the Albion put forward plans to develop the Goldstone with a capacity of 28,000. These plans were available for public viewing at Hove town hall. All in the past now eh!
That's only two games out of 21, it doesn't explain why the overall average dropped by over 3,000.No Spurs or Saints the following year though.
In terms of yesterday's crowd, although it was an official sell-out, the block in the S next to the away fans was only 2/3 full, and the back 2 rows of the N stand on the east side were empty. Is this because we are bumping up against the safety maximum, rather than running out of available seats?
PG
No worries, I'm just amazed at how many people glibly state that our capacity 'was reduced in 1979 to 28,000'. You're not the only offender on this thread and I've seen it before. Interestingly in the whole of the 'glory years' (well, until the South Stand burned down at the end of our first season in the top flight) the biggest crowd, was the 33,500 (i.e. the all-ticket sell-out) for the Derby County League Cup game. The next closest was the Blackpool game at the end of 77/78 with 33,431. Man U, Liverpool, Arsenal, Palace - none of them came close. All quite incredible though when you think the first game of the 76/77 season (Mullery's first) there were 'only' 13,000 there.
That's only two games out of 21, it doesn't explain why the overall average dropped by over 3,000.
I was there, had to stand in the East right next to the away supporters... they were mental! Even for Norwich standards.
I was talking about the drop from 78 to 79 which went down about 450 on average. We had 30 k against Spurs and Saints in the 78/79 campaign didn't we so their replacements the following season may have not been such an attraction and couple that with the 2nd season syndrome We are only talking about 10.3 k over the course of the season. The drop once we got to the top flight was down to the increasing crowd trouble and the fact we got tonked most weeks.
Eh? Our first season in the Second Division (77/78) we averaged 25,264. Our second season (78/79) we only averaged 22,074, a drop of 3,190. One of the reasons was that whilst it was ultimately successful we DID actually struggle for a while: at one stage we were as low as 12th and all the plastics went back to their big teams*. In that first season we were always there or thereabouts.
*My tongue is slightly in my cheek with that comment!
Eh? Our first season in the Second Division (77/78) we averaged 25,264. Our second season (78/79) we only averaged 22,074, a drop of 3,190. One of the reasons was that whilst it was ultimately successful we DID actually struggle for a while: at one stage we were as low as 12th and all the plastics went back to their big teams*. In that first season we were always there or thereabouts.
*My tongue is slightly in my cheek with that comment!
Two other factors to take into account.
In 77/78 our last game was at home and we got a massive crowd v Blackpool, hoping we could get promotion. Our last game in 78/79 couldn't earn us promotion and it was about 11,000 fewer - that's a massive decrease.
You should also remember that 78/79 was an exceptionally cold winter (the worst since 62/83 or 48/49 depending what records you look at). People may have been put off by the cold or simply not been able to travel. I lived in Bradford that season and I don't think I came down once in term-time whereas the previous season I travelled down a couple of times per term.
It was also the 'Winter of Discontent' and maybe some of the supporters were on strike for part of that winter and had less spare cash. May only have been a hundred or so, but all these different reasons start adding up.
Wasn't today the deadline for ST renewals? If so wonder how many actually renewed
Eh? Our first season in the Second Division (77/78) we averaged 25,264. Our second season (78/79) we only averaged 22,074, a drop of 3,190. One of the reasons was that whilst it was ultimately successful we DID actually struggle for a while: at one stage we were as low as 12th and all the plastics went back to their big teams*. In that first season we were always there or thereabouts.
*My tongue is slightly in my cheek with that comment!