@Per: I guess I shouldn't be out on the Berlin streets then, with that shirt on. Well, I'll carry some photo camera or some other tourist attributes, to make it look more innocent.
Eddies Wingman said:
I started getting into football in the early nineties, and two of my best friends from back then (in primary school) were Manchester United fans. One of them had it from his father and the other one from the first.
At the same time some other guys in my class, that I was not too friendly with back then, were Liverpool fans.
So really, I was converted from being almost completely uninterested in football to having it as my top interest (and reading everything I could come across about Man Utd) over a few months, triggered by my mates.
Sounds like a logical development. I can imagine the influence of those other guys, the Liverpool fans, hehe.
I started getting into football some 10 years earlier. In the season 1983/84. It looked like everyone at school was for Ajax, but one day I encountered a drunk dude on the train station, giving away Feyenoord scarfs, for free. His enthusiasm grabbed me. I turned into a Feyenoord fan. I have to admit that my family (father and his brothers) also preferred Feyenoord, which is a real working class club, the club of the people. Ajax is more elite, so to speak. Feyenoord has always had a huge loyal fanbase, which was very important in the long years without success. I liked that. It was also more exciting to be a fan of a club which does
not win every year. Back to the 83/84 season. This was a legendary season. Johan Cruyff's last season. At the end of the 1982–83 season, he played for Ajax (he played many years for Ajax, also in the sixties and seventies, Ajax really was his club) but Ajax decided not to offer Cruyff a new contract. This angered Cruyff, who responded by signing for Ajax's archrivals Feyenoord. Cruyff's season at Feyenoord was a successful one in which the club won the Eredivisie for the first time in a decade, part of a league and cup double.
So this was a great season to start following football intensely. Some of the best actions and goals I have seen in that season. Another legendary player, Ruud Gullit also played for Feyenoord back then. A great combo.
In 1984 I started to follow international football, being a huge fan of Platini and France. No Holland. In 1986 Maradona. No Holland. And Feyenoord? The next championship was in 1993. So, 1985-1992 were the dark years.
Apart from one year: 1988! Holland became European champions. Which was of course amazing, and awesome.
Eddies Wingman said:
I'd say the year 1993 was when it started, I was 11 years old, and the first international match I watched on TV was the World Cup qualifier between Norway and England
Little did I know then about the frustration that had been associated with following United for the 25 years preceding 1993. I soon learned about it.
1993 eh, here we can pick up the League together again.
Around that time Jan Mølby was still playing for Liverpool. Man what a great player he was. The way he ruled on the midfield with those passes. Very impressive.
Cantona was also great to watch. Naturally there were more great players around that time, but these come to mind now.
Eddies Wingman said:
However, the first Premier League match I attended was not a United match, but Tottenham vs Aston Villa in August 1997. A fascinating encounter in which Spurs took the lead, Villa got 2-1 up before half time and then Spurs got back to win 3-2. Exactly the same as happened last time I saw United ringside. A 3-2 win against Villa, after being 2-1 down.
I have only attended two Feyenoord matches. One league match in 1985 (I think), a draw without goals vs Sparta (the other, older club from Rotterdam), and one friendly match vs a local club, near where I live. I obtained two autographs (lost them both) from John the Wolf and Henk Fräser.
So, I am not a hardcore fan who likes to be there all the time. I prefer watching the games in my (or someone else's) living room.