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TRUE BLUE STORIES
WHY BLUE Gareth Foster
Growing up in Thornton Road (the street just behind the Kippax), I suppose
you would expect me to be a blue. And so it happens, I am, but not for the
want of trying by my dad to turn me into scum. He had been a red all his
life, growing up in the Old Trafford area of Manchester. I remember
watching Match of the Day, with my dad sat there in his flared Jeans
cheering as a scum player notched another fluke for the Rags. I wasn't that
interested in football then, but I tended to watch between playing with my
first Star Wars figures and the lego. I used to play footie with my mates
outside the ground, we used the North Stand floodlight as goalposts.
It wasn't 'til I was a bit older I really got interested, and I've got my
grandad to thank for that. Not coming from a rich family, I was never given
enough pocket money to attend first team games, but every Tuesday night
without fail, grandpops used to take me to a reserve or youth team game at
Maine Road, and I remember enjoying myself stood up in the old Main Stand,
screaming my head off with about a hundred other people. I thought that was
what it was all about. I used to look out of my window, staring at the
looming shapes of the four floodlights, waiting for them to be turned on.
Then a friend of mine who had a season ticket couldn't go to a game. It was
a match against Charlton. I grabbed the ticket and was in the ground by
2.00, waiting in anticipation for my first first team game. I couldn't
believe how many people turned up! I was only expecting the hundred or so
that came to reserve games. To top it all we won the game. I was hooked, I
had to have more of this. I pestered my dad to get a season ticket for me.
He was reluctant to let me go on my own at first, so he got two, and
started attending with me. As time went on he became more and more involved
with City's exploits, and gradually lost faith in the rags. He became a
blue (his rose tinted glasses eventually broke when the sh** started
changing their kits six times every season 'Bloody t***s,' he used to say,
'they dont care about their fans'.
Now that my grandad has passed on to the great big City gates in the sky, I
attend every game at home, and most away if work will allow. I've moved to
Edgeley in Stockport now, so next seasons derby games at the County ground
will be handy, but my parents still live in Thornton Road, and when I go to
see them, its still a buzz to be able to see the looming shape of the new
Kippax.
Gareth Foster - A Proud Blue for 23 years, and counting
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