- May 8, 2018
- 11,702
Syndicate - Blackpool
I agree TB has done an incredible job.People get pissed off and disagree with me every time I say this - but we are a 'big club' now.
We have a huge revenue, large international fan base, and we're an established team in the most watched league in the world now.
What a job TB has done.
I agree TB has done an incredible job.
But...
If those are your metrics then there are currently 17 'big clubs' in England? And if you get relegated then you're 'big club' status is immediately revoked?
Also are all 17 'big clubs' the same 'bigness'? If not what is the label you'd give to the bigger big clubs or the smaller big clubs?
Unlike some members on here, I don't mind a bit of a big club debate. I don't however consider us to be one.
Brilliant postThe biggest clubs in English football for me are Brighton & Hove Albion, Aldershot Town and Whitehawk. All others don't matter- because I don't support them.
The big club debate is a silly willy waving exercise among the third class fans who wear the badge of their chosen tool for the egocentric armchair glory hunt.
I quite like being classed as a small club because when Albion beat a 'big team' the meltdowns and soul searching is a thing to behold.
It also means we stay humble.
Give me a black clad Palace fan who knows what he loves and foolishly adores what he knows, rather than a new merchandise wearing United fan from Woking who spends so much time on their settee and arguing on Facebook that they have bum sores.
I can't think of anything more unfulfilling than being a fan of a 'big club' unless you have a proper story to tell.
It's always the same.
Every fa group have their own criteria to define "bigness".
I was listening to a Podcast the other day featuring a Palace supporter.
He described Place and Fulham as the biggest clubs that have never won a trophy.
Neither club could currently argue that they are a better, or more supported club than us at this moment in time.
Neither has a glorious past. A handful of good moments throughout their past is about it.
I agree, fanbase is a good starting point for size of club. The Amex is apparently(wiki...) the 23rd biggest league ground in England. There are 15 stadiums within 3000 seats either side of it though.My logic has always been: size of a club = fanbase.
Afterall, football fans ARE the football club.
Winning major trophies absolutely builds a clubs reputation, and therefore cements loyalty of many existing football fans and brings in new ones... but just need to look at Wigan or Portsmouth to know that winning major trophies, even recently, does not contribute towards the definition of the size of a club.
Are all Premier League sides big? No. It takes years to acquire hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of permanent fans around the world and become the absolutely dominant club in the city/region. I would say most current Premier League sides have massive fanbases though, and are big clubs by definition.
If we got relegated - we would not lose all of the fans that we have acquired. We would remain 'big' for a time. Years out of the Premier League though, many of global fans would disappear and lose interest - some of the local ones too.
To summarise, our fanbase is now... massive. Like most Premier League clubs. We dominate the entire county now. We have built massive fanbases all around the world. Relegation for a year or two won't change that - but years outside the top division might.
But one thing's for sure, it would take decades of being outside the top two divisions to ever to be as 'small' as we were at the turn of the century.
I agree, fanbase is a good starting point for size of club. The Amex is apparently(wiki...) the 23rd biggest league ground in England. There are 15 stadiums within 3000 seats either side of it though.
I disagree that we have hundreds of thousands or millions of permanent fans around the world. We have some temporary ones due to players from their countries playing for us. We have very, very few 'permanent' ones in my opinion.
I do agree that we have moved ourselves considerably further up the food/size chain than where we were 25 years ago. There is a generation of football fans around the world who now know who we are. Very few of them are our fans though.
Unless you weighed yourself before and after having a shit.I've found that, when you stand on the scales at the end of the day, it doesn't hugely matter how much shit you're full of, you're still just as big on the dial.
I've tried. It makes no differenceUnless you weighed yourself before and after having a shit.
Imagine doing that ?
True, I might be underestimating our global appeal but I'm basing it off my own experience. I live in Asia and I work with and meet hundreds/thousands of international kids and adults each year.I think you underestimate the scale of the Premier League's reach - and how so many countries (with lesser leagues) adopt Premier League clubs as their favourite.
1.9bn people around the world watch the Premier League. If 1% of those adopt the Albion as their favourite team, that's 19 million 'fans'. If just 1% of those become permanent, that's 190,000 global fans - surely more than we have locally. I would say that's being pessimistic.
We're very popular in North America. The countless yanks that are on /r/Brighton like the way the club we run, the football we play, the players and often superficially - they like our name/crest/shirt. How many of those are permanent fans? Who knows, but at least some will become permanent, even with relegation.
Of course though, the most important fans we have are the local ones. We are more popular in Sussex than ANY other club now, by some distance. Albion shirts are seen in all our towns and villages along the coast and the A23. It would take a lot more than just relegation to lose many of those.
I don't know about that.I agree, fanbase is a good starting point for size of club. The Amex is apparently(wiki...) the 23rd biggest league ground in England. There are 15 stadiums within 3000 seats either side of it though.
I disagree that we have hundreds of thousands or millions of permanent fans around the world. We have some temporary ones due to players from their countries playing for us. We have very, very few 'permanent' ones in my opinion.
I do agree that we have moved ourselves considerably further up the food/size chain than where we were 25 years ago. There is a generation of football fans around the world who now know who we are. Very few of them are our fans though.
I don't know about that.
Sweden and Norway were the first countries to buy the rights ($800 per game) to show games from the English top flights, back in 1969.
Around 35% of the population in Sweden watched the weekly game.
Today 20% of Swedish football fans over 50 claim they got their favorite team through this. Most of the other 80% obviously support a Swedish team.
And it lasts! Take SwedeWolves for example: 500+ members, annual member trips bringing 40-50 people to England - PL, Championship or League One doesn't matter.
Hopefully. I'd say there's a 50/50 chance I don't spend rest of my life in poverty.Does this mean that one day you might come and actually watch a game?
Hopefully. I'd say there's a 50/50 chance I don't spend rest of my life in poverty.