Friday, December 23, 2022

A Christmas Karol Poborsky

 ‘Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the club, not a player was roaming, they were all in the pub

Christmas Eve. A pause for breath before a run of three games in a week, then four days off before a tricky FA Cup 3rd round tie away at Chelsea. After a strong season vying for a European spot last year, we’d regressed to our mean and were now scrapping against relegation. Our usual spot, true, but after last year the fans were upset. Pride of Kent? We’d struggle to be called the Pride of Medway. 


I was frustrated and angry. After all I’d done for this club, dragging them up from the doldrums of League 2 to give Premier League football to the masses, and this is how I get repaid? Talking heads talking utter nonsense on tv about how I was nothing without my old assistant manager. A new consortium, demanding to know why I wasn’t winning games 6-0 while blooding five new youth players a match. Fans banging on the dugout - MY DUGOUT - after a late equaliser got us a point at home to Fulham, calling for my head. 


I’ve turned a profit in every season! Buying cheap, selling high, finding diamonds in the rough. Always sticking to my wage budget, and why spend money on transfers when free agents are just as good? Record transfer fee? Much good may it do them! 


I flung a stapler across my office in frustration, narrowly missing my new assistant manager as he barged in.


“Oh, what do you want, Robert?” I sneered at him. I’d brought him in to inject some fresh blood to the side, in the hopes that we could push on and take the club into Europe - not that being in Europe appeals to the Kentish masses - but instead we’d butted heads on almost every decision.


“News from the board, boss. They said you’ve got three games to turn it around or you’re out.” 


“Right then! Those defensive drills I told you to run are going to come in handy! Two banks of four, a low block, stick Murray and Allen up front for any loose balls. Defend defend defend! We can’t lose if we don’t concede, and they won’t sack me if I’m undefeated after those three games!”


“Alright, ok.” We’d had discussions before about tactics, Cratchy and I. He had a “revolutionary new formation” that would get the best out of Murray, but I’d always shouted it down (sometimes literally) as it left us too open at the back. “They also wanted to remind you - again - to bring through more players from the youth side.”


“That’s it!” I roared. “I’ve had quite enough of their ‘children are the future’ rubbish. Contact every single player on the U-23 and U-18 teams, tell them their contracts are cancelled, we’re closing the academy. They can’t make me bring through players from the youth side if we don’t have a youth side!”


“Boss, it’s Christmas Eve!”


“Good, then try their landline numbers first, they’ll probably be at home with their families!” I allowed myself a brief smile. While it wouldn't do to show emotion in front of my lessers, it felt good to get one over those busybodies from CJHD. There’s no place in football for investment firms!


“What’ll happen to the players?”


“Are there no Swindons? No Maidstones? Smaller clubs will be happy to pick up our rejects!” I quickly considered a different approach. Could we offer the players on a free with a sell-on clause? No, there’s no money down in the Football League. It’s not worth it.


“But boss, my boy’s in the Under-18 squad, he’s done his ACL, nobody’ll take him!”


“Nobody would take him anyway you muppet, he’s only here as a favour to you! Hopefully he’s got his mother’s brains so he’ll have a prospering career outside of football, at least! Now, show yourself out, you’ve got calls to make!”


No sooner had Cratchy left than I departed as well, with a growl. My hopes for a pub dinner were dashed by the oiks that frequented the local taverns, so I sat with a microwave meal in front of the tv. A peaceful evening, ruined when my door slammed open.


“Ebby! Me old mucker, can’t believe you’re still hanging on at that club!” 


Robert Marlborough - a right geezer, proper football man, and my former assistant manager up until his retirement seven months ago this very night - had dropped by.


“Marley! I thought you’d moved to the Canary Islands! What brings you back?”


“Nah, couldn’t stand it there, too many Norwich fans! Had to come by, see me old mate, didn’t I? ‘Ere, what time is it? One? Stick Sky Sports News on, they’re running an interview with a familiar face on the hour!”


I changed the channel to be confronted with Dan “Danny” White, former club captain now playing in the Bundesliga, talking about the relegation battle.


“Useless workshy sod, ‘e only went to Germany because of the winter break, the lazy git!”


I hushed Marley, and paid attention to the interview.


“...such a sad sight, y’know, to see a once proud club down fighting to stay in this league, y’know? When I were there like, before I left for Hamburg…”


“Bah! Hamburg!” I shouted at the TV.


“...we were on the cusp of Europe, y’know, things was looking up, but me old gaffer’s holding them back! They need someone more forward thinking, y’know, like Erik van Schmidt!”


I turned off the TV in disgust. Marley looked up at me from the sofa.


“I ‘ate to say it, but the boy’s right. Remember our League One campaign? Putting all them sides to the sword? Remember when you lost that drinking competition and had to play a 2-3-5 formation at ‘ome to Mansfield? That 10-4 win’s the stuff of legends! That’s the Ebby that people should remember, not this “quick on the draw” merchant! My history’s already been written, but you, Ebby, you can change yours!”


“Oh, what is this, Marley? Get out, and take your KFC with your optimism! There’s more gravy than grave about you, what’s happened? You’ve gone soft!”


“You still have a chance, Ebby. A chance and hope of escaping my fate. But you need to change, mate.” 


At that, Marley left, slamming my door behind him. I turned the TV back on. Danny White was still spitting pearls of wisdom. 


“Really, y’know, me old gaffer’s lost the dressing room. ‘E’s got no control there any more.”


“I bloody haven’t! I have the power to make those lazy sods happy or unhappy! To make their training light or heavy! A pleasure or a toil!” I roared, not caring that he couldn’t hear me, and forgetting that I’d long since delegated the training duties to my assistant. 


Danny turned to the camera, his eyes burning deep within my soul, and somehow becoming more eloquent. “He's scared, that's what it is. All his other hopes have merged into the hope of being beyond the chance of the sack. His nobler aspirations have gently dropped off, and now all he cares about is hoarding points, not entertaining football.”


I turned the TV back off. What did he know? 


“Bah, Hamburg” I repeated, as I went to bed.


After what felt like hours of tossing and turning, I was still no closer to dropping off. I was interrupted at the stroke of midnight by the grand sonorous bells of St Martin’s church ringing out - I’d set them as my ringtone, and they were chiming out the sound of a video call from Cratchy. 


“Ah, Cratchy! Finally seen the light and come to terms with my low block, have we?” I greeted my assistant.


“No-o, not that boss. We’re letting the kids open a present early, then they’re going to bed to wait for Santa. Just thought with you being all alone you might want a bit of familial Christmas joy!”


“Christmas joy?! Have you learned nothing over the last seven months?! And Santa? Cratchy, your youngest child is the 17-year-old giant with one leg stinking up my youth academy! Aren’t they a little too old to be believing in Santa?”


“But boss, just you wait until you see the childlike wonder on their faces! I’m just hiding my phone in the tree, they won’t know you’re there.”


I tutted while he positioned me near the top of the tree, where my club will be once the defensive drills are in place. His family filed in, with the youngest, Timmy, hobbling in on crutches. Heh, I chuckled to myself, Cratchit’s Crutches would be a good name for a business, maybe there’s hope for them yet. They exchanged gifts, but before opening them, Robbie stood up to say a few words.


“Now, I know we all had high hopes when I took on this assistant manager position. A Premier League club, my first proper coaching role, it’s not going well but I’m confident that we can turn this around, avoid relegation, and then I can start earning a proper wage. A toast! To the man who gave me my start in football!”


“Oh, I’d give him a start alright!” his wife piped up. “You’ve been nothing but unhappy ever since you started working for him! All he cares about is clean sheets and long balls, nothing good in life!”


“Honey, please, not in front of-” a glance towards my vantage point in the tree “not in front of the children.” 


I was distracted by an email from the club doctor. By sheer chance, it had the results of the younger Cratchit’s latest scan, and insomuch as I could understand the medical gobbledegook, it didn’t look good for his future career. I returned to the call, and it seemed like he knew it too, as his toast was half-hearted and distracted. I didn’t want to be watching any longer.


Two hours later. Normally two paragraphs of a puff-piece on The Athletic about Pep Guardiola’s revolutionary tactics would be enough to send me to sleep, but I’d read three full articles - including comments! - and was no closer to slumber. I turned on the radio app on my phone, to hear the latest attempts at punditry from ex-players trying to earn a quick coin.


“And what of the battle at the bottom, what do we think there?” 


“Well, it’s not looking good for the bottom club. You know what they say, bottom at Christmas, almost certain to go down! They’ve held on to that Scrooge fella for far too long.”


I was shocked. I’d brought them up from League Two, is there no loyalty in the modern game?


“But he brought them up from League Two,” the host continued, “is there no loyalty in the modern game?”


“Welllll, there’s loyalty, and there’s loyalty. If they want to stay up, they need to pay him up, and get someone new and forward thinking in place! They did the right thing, forcing him to get a dynamic young assistant when his old mate retired in the summer, maybe it’s time to let Cratchit take the reins completely? Otherwise, they’ll get stuck in their ways, and regress to bouncing around between League One and Two like they usually do. And with those bank loans they’ve taken out to pay for the new stadium, eesh, it’s not looking good. This could be the peak. A tumble down the league, successive relegations, administration and bankruptcy aren’t out of the picture for them. They need a change of ways, and fast!”


"Spirit FM!" I cried, tight clutching at the phone, "hear me! I am not the man I was. I will not be the man I must have been but for these nightmares. Why show me this, if I am past all hope? I will honour attacking football in my heart, and try to keep it all the year. I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future. The ideas of entertaining football shall strive within me. I will not shut out the lessons that it teaches!”


A jolt of electricity from the phone, and I dropped it, smashing it on my cold wooden floors. Finally I felt like I could rest. 


I awoke with a start, on a cold crisp morning. Hurtling open my bedroom window I gazed down on a snow-laden street. I felt elated, joyous, like I could skip down the touchline. A new man! It wasn’t over yet, and I decided if these were my last three games, I’d go out in a blaze of glory! But I felt so rested, had I missed the Boxing Day game? A young urchin in club colours was rolling a snowman on the street below.


“You there, boy! What day is it?”


“Fuck off out my club you useless waste of space! Let someone else take over for the derby tomorrow!”


Tomorrow. The match was tomorrow! It was still Christmas Day! That foulmouthed little brat was right! 


With a covering of snow on the pitches, there was no hope for training. I reached for my phone to let the players know, only to find the shattered remains beneath my bed. No matter! I dressed in my best club tracksuit, and strode towards the Cratchits, jovially greeting the few runners that passed me. No sooner had I begun to hammer on Cratchy’s door than it opened, and I was greeted by my assistant.


“Boss! I was just leaving for training, I swear!”


“No, no need for that Cratchy, you’re not taking training today!”


“What? If you’ve turned up at my house to fire me on Christmas morning, that’s low, even by your standards! Heck, that’s low even by Crystal-Palace-firing-Trevor-Francis-on-his-birthday standards!”


“No, no, don’t worry, I’m not firing you! Why would I fire the man who has such revolutionary ideas about ginger-pressing!”


“Um, boss, I think you mean gegenpressing, and that’s not my idea…”


“Well, whatever, I need you to tell me all of your wonderful ideas! But please, surely you can let me in? I come bearing good news - we’re signing that attacking midfielder from Turkey that I kept telling you we didn’t have the funds for!”


Cratchy let me in, reluctantly, and I burst into the warm front room - which rapidly became colder than the outside when the family Cratchit saw it was me. Understandable, I did sign their patriarch to a contract slightly under a living wage. But that was going to change.


“Good news, everyone! I’m not stealing your father from you today - training is cancelled, so you can keep him all day!”


“How generous of you,” Mrs Cratchit muttered, with a possible hint of sarcasm.


“And that’s not all! I’m going to start listening to him more, and try the Diamond Destroyer (ZaZ - Blue DM - Martin Snoop 433 Hybrid) tactic he’s been recommending! While my time at the club may be drawing to a close, at least we’ll have some fun!”


Their faces brightened. I had one more card to play, to show that I really was a changed man.


“And what’s this? Santa seems to have dropped a present at my place by mistake! Open this, will you, young Timmy?”


The young man hobbled over to take an envelope from my outstretched hand. I probably should have not made the kid with the ACL injury move about, but this whole “being good” thing is a work in progress.


“Well, young man, what is it?”


He ran his finger along the text on the front, mouthing the words as he read them.


“It’s…it’s a new three year contract!”


“Yes, we’ve seen your potential, and want to nurture it. I know we’re waiting for the result of your scans to come back, but I wanted to give you a guaranteed income, just in case the worst happens.” 


“Wow! Thanks Mr Scrooge!”


From that day, I was a changed man. Each game was approached with the principle of out-scoring our opponents, putting them to the sword with wave after wave of attack. Sure, we lost a few, but with Cratchy by my side, we clawed our way into Europe. I didn’t even consider packing the defence, and even spent some of my transfer war-chest. The younger Cratchit even returned to playing, making a last ditch tackle in the Europa Conference final to win us our first proper trophy. As the final whistle blew, we locked eyes, and I swear he said “God bless us, every one!”


“What was that, Timmy?”


“I said, ‘Get in! It’s gonna be a messy one!”


Sunday, December 11, 2022

Football Survey

For the last decade, if not longer, I’ve done an end of year gig survey, giving a bit of an overview of the gigs I’ve attended this year. For the first time since I had a half season-ticket for Gillingham’s glorious promotion winning season of 1999-2000, I’ve attended more football matches than gigs in a calendar year - so I thought, why not rejig the survey for football? 


Top 5 games of the year?

  1. England 2 Germany 1 aet, Wembley, 31st July
  2. BSG Chemie Leipzig 1 Berliner Dynamo 1, Alfred-Kunze-Sportpark, 13th March
  3. Arsenal  7 Aston Villa 0, Meadow Park, 1st May
  4. Germany 4 Denmark 0, Brentford Community Stadium, 8th July
  5. Arsenal 2 Ajax Amsterdam 2, Meadow Park, 20th September

Total number of matches?

Eleven, first year in ages I’ve hit double digits!

First match of the year?

Chemie Leipzig 1 Berliner Dynamo 1, 13th March

Last match of the year?

Arsenal 1 Everton 0, 3rd December

Most surprising game?

I honestly didn’t expect England to come out on top in the Euro 2022 final!

Most disappointing?

England 0 Czech Republic 0, 11th October. I’ve had hangovers more fun than that.

Farthest travelled?

Alfred-Kunze-Sportpark in Leipzig, 600 miles/1,000 km from my front door.

States attended games in?

Cheerful, grateful, euphoric, drunk, bored, knackered and achy.

Stadium most visited?

Amex/Falmer Community stadium in Brighton and Meadow Park in London, both three times.

Worst injury?

I had a horrible attack of hay-fever during the second half of the Germany vs Denmark game that sent me scrambling for antihistamines in a nearby Sainsburys afterwards. This was mid July, in the middle of a hot spell that I thought had burnt up all plant life in the country, and after not being affected by hay-fever all year prior to that I thought I was safe - evidently not!

Most expensive ticket?

The Euro 2022 final ticket was £25, that was my highest. The perks of watching women’s football! (Or 4th tier German men’s football)

Player seen the most?

I saw Lena Oberdorf play four times for club and country - the first two, in club colours, I didn’t really appreciate her style, but I came around quickly after she tucked Pernille Harder in her pocket for Germany! I think Leah Williamson and Beth Mead top her with six appearances apiece. Shoutout to Karen Holmgaard who was the only player I saw play twice for two different clubs - Turbine Potsdam in May, and Everton in December. She didn’t make it off the bench for Germany’s massacre of Denmark, otherwise I would’ve seen her play three times for three different teams, with a combined scoreline of 0-9 in those games! 

Best new discovery?

Definitely Lena Oberdorf! Her tough-tackling style, complete with Wob buying up two of my other favourite German players (Merle Frohms and Jule Brand), plus my partner being in awe of Wassmuth’s cheekbones and Jonsdottir’s...general awesomness, means that I’ve been streaming more Wolfsburg games than I expected this autumn.

Bands seen this year that also broke up this year?

I’m not sure how to make this football related, but I’m open to suggestions.

Friends made at games?

I don’t know if they count, as I knew Joel online before the matches, but in May I flew to Cologne all alone for the German cup final (Wolfsburg vs Turbine Potsdam). A 50,000 seater stadium, and I knew only one other person there. Walking out of the toilets before the match, guess who I bump into? We sat together and had a great time, even if the result didn’t go our way. Two months later, having sat with Jamie, Mary, Adam and friends before the match, I made my way around the Wembley concourse to find my gate for the Euros final when I hear my name shouted from a queue. Guess who it was?!

Footballers met?

Tricky, in this post-COVID era, and with the general increase in popularity of the women’s game this will become rarer. But after the Arsenal vs Villa game at the end of last season I met and got a photo with then-England keeper Hannah Hampton - a player I’ve both enjoyed and been frustrated by watching whenever she’s played against a team I like. 

Best souvenir from a game?

My Chemie Leipzig scarf is soft, comfortable, and confuses the heck out of people as it’s green and white. (”Who’s that? Celtic? Plymouth? Yeovil? St Etienne?”) 

Longest time in line?

Aside from Wembley, I’ve had very little queuing.

Games seen from the front row?

Arsenal’s games at Meadow Park I’ve seen from my favoured spot on the front row of the northern terraces. I was pretty far forward for the Wolfsburg vs Turbine game and as a consequence couldn’t see much action in the opposite goalmouth. 

Most games in one month?

July had four, a result of my country hosting an international tournament.

Most games in one week?

Two! Austria vs Norway and England vs Spain within five days of each other.

Biggest crowd?

Wembley, for the Euros final! 87,192 in attendance, the largest crowd for a European Championship game ever, of any gender. 

Any drunk encounters?

I took advantage of being able to drink beer in the stands at the two games in Germany. The England vs Czech Republic game was so dull I made good use of Harvey’s being on tap in the lounge nearby, too. I also had a fun encounter with a drunk Portsmouth fan at the England vs Spain game.

Top 5 best 2022 footballing moments:

1. There were three iconic goals that did the advancement of the women’s game in England no end of good this summer, and I witness two of them in person! Chloe Kelly’s winner against Germany in the goalmouth at my end in the final is an obvious one, as well as Russo’s cheeky backheel in the semi. But Ella Toone’s equaliser in the quarter final against Spain was just as important. This was the first of four quarter final matches, and after a rampaging group stage the Lionesses had really captured the attention of the country. Had they gone out the first time they played a decent team it would’ve deflated the mood; attendances probably would’ve dropped, the usual sexist bores would’ve trumpeted the usual remarks, and it would not have come home. With Toone’s header - and Stanway’s winner - they really got the country behind them!

2. For sheer luck, bumping into the same person in crowds of 50,000 and 87,000 on separate occasions was great!

3. Chatting to a drunk Portsmouth fan next to me at the England vs Spain game. I was wearing an old Germany away shirt, for fun.

"So, <cod 'allo 'allo style accent>, ver you 'oping vor Germany tonight?" 

Me: "No, my friends thought it would be funny if I wore a Germany shirt to the game."

After discussing the tournament so far: "What was the last club match you went to?" "Wolfsburg vs Turbine Potsdam in the German cup final" "Is that your team then, Wolfsburg?" "Nah, I'm a Gillingham fan!" I genuinely think I broke him. 

Me: "Weird seeing a match from this angle, it's like a Football Manager game!" Him: "Dare I ask which team you're managing?" "Pisa, in Italy" "You fascinate me, man"

4. On the subject of Football Manager - in March 2020, Red Bull Leipzig were getting a lot of puff pieces in the English press, as they were due to play Spurs in the Champions League, and so the media were fawning all over how they had bought out a village team, renamed them after a soft drink and shovelled millions into the club built a team up from nothing to be title contenders. When lockdown hit, and I was bored, rather than spend my time improving myself as a person I decided to prove that it could be done properly - I took over an actual Leipzig side, then languishing in the 5th tier, and with only my skills and no influx of cash beyond what I could earn from promotions and player sales, tried to make them bigger than Red Bull. In that save my Chemie Leipzig side have won ten times more league titles and four more Champions League than RB. In real life, they’re in the German 4th tier, but while nearby on holiday in March I took advantage of the fixtures and went to see them grind out a 1-1 draw against the league leaders. It was cold, I missed both goals queuing for beer, but the atmosphere was amazing and I was so glad I got to see my beautiful football boys in the flesh! 

5. Steve Evans and Gillingham parted ways. I had been boycotting my childhood club while that odious crook was in charge, so I was glad to call myself a Gills fan again. 

6. BONUS! While on a run in a tiny Czech industrial town I found the football stadium. And broke in (went through an open gate) to take a picture of me in the main stand! 

Top 3 worst 2022 footballing moments:

1. Prasnikar’s goal for Frankfurt against Potsdam in the league at the end of May. A point for Potsdam would’ve probably seen them qualify for the Champions League - the influx of cash certainly would’ve helped keep the team together. Instead, following a 4-0 hammering in the cup final, a large number of players left, to be replaced by recruits from the 3rd division; they were followed by the manager and president. Turbine are now bottom of the league, and this once great club who play in blue and white are now odds-on for relegation. Remove the “once great” part and it could describe Gillingham’s season too - clearly I have a type!

2. I regret wearing my Germany shirt to the Wembley final.

3. I regret going out into the cold to watch England 0 Czech Republic 0.

Sunday, December 04, 2022

Gig survey 2022

It’s back! After the last two quiet years (2021 had two gigs, 2020 half that), my annual gig survey makes a  return. 

 Top 5 shows of the year?
  1. Muna, Chalk, 11th November
  2. Against The Current, Chalk, 31st March
  3. Poppy, Shepherds Bush Empire, 27th November
  4. Lights, Chalk, 24th September
  5. Carly Rae Jepsen, Somerset House, 11th July

Total number of shows?

Ten, significantly more than the last two years combined!

First show of the year?

Foxes, at Islington Assembly Hall, 2nd March.

Last show of the year?

Poppy, at Shepherd’s Bush Empire, November 27th.

Most surprising show?

Three different shows are tied for this, all of which took place at the same venue. In mid March Dana had been to see Bastille at Chalk, and while in the chippy that same night I noticed a pop-punk band were due to play there at the end of the month. I dropped £10 on the tickets, not expecting to go, and had a fantastic time watching Against The Current! Six months later I went along with Dana to a gig she’d bought a pair of tickets for, being vaguely aware of who Lights was, and had another fantastic time, so when she gently reminded me that she’d got an extra for Muna (a band I only knew from one song with Phoebe Bridgers) I didn’t hesitate to accompany her, and was rewarded!

Most disappointing?

Foxes, two years of not really going to gigs had made a lot of people forget their manners.

Farthest travelled?

Wembley arena, 56 miles or 90km from my front door.

States attended shows in?

Cheerful, grateful, euphoric, terrified, bored, knackered and achy. 

Venue most visited?

Chalk in Brighton, three times.

Worst injury?

My legs were terribly achy for the Sigrid gig, after Muna the night before and a day around London.

Most expensive ticket?

I think perhaps Olivia Rodrigo? Or Carly?

Band seen the most?

No repeats, everyone was one and done.

Best new discovery?

As alluded to above, I didn't pay the greatest of attention to Against The Current, Lights or Muna before seeing them live. Witch Fever were a fun support for Poppy.

Bands seen this year that also broke up this year?

None!

Friends made at shows?

None! Just the two gigs on my own (ATC and Poppy) and I didn't feel particularly social at either.

Band members met?

None that I've seen live, but I've hung out with Billy and Camille from The Subways a couple of times in Brighton.

Best souvenir from a show?

Just the two band t-shirts this year, a £10 Against The Current one and a £30 Poppy one. I wanted to pay a fiver for a Foxes hoodie but they only had small sizes left.

Longest time in line?

The longest was before Olivia Rodrigo, which ended up queuing round the block but that didn't take long to clear.

Shows seen from the barricade [front row]?

But as a consequence, we didn't make the front row for any.

Most shows in one month?

November had three...

Most shows in one week?

... Including Muna and Sigrid in successive days.

Biggest crowd?

Probably Christina Aguilera at Pride.

Any drunk encounters?

No, surprisingly! I stayed restrained with my drinking, and nobody around me was annoyingly drunk either.

Top 5 best 2022 concert moments:

1. As Sophie Ellis-Bextor launched into her 2001 number 1 Groovejet (If This Ain't Love) at Brighton Pride, I casually remarked to Dana and her sister Sophie that it was the first song ever played on an iPod. One of the lads in front of me, apparently within earshot, turned to me and asked if it was true, then immediately said to his friend group "guys! You'll never guess what I just learned!"

2. On a similar note, talking to Ian before Carly, the conversation turned to Avril Lavigne and I brought up my planned jukebox musical (Complicated: An Avril Lavigne Musical). He thought I was joking right up until I showed him the Google Doc with the song list and rough plot outline. After reading through and conceding that, yes, I was serious and yes, that could actually work, one of the girls behind asked if she could read it as well!

3. A small one, but during the blisteringly hot Sunday at Brighton Pride, the sight of a goth chap dressed head to toe in black leather, white face paint and all, cheerfully tucking in a 99 ice cream (flake as well!)

4. Against The Current felt like the first proper gig since, well, the last time I did one of these. Chrissy commented that with the state of things, they didn't know how many shows they'd get to perform, so were committed to throwing themselves into each show 100% - and it showed!

5. Muna was amazing, everyone in stage and in the audience were fully up for it, and the crowd was genuinely the nicest crowd at a gig I've ever been in!

Top 3 worst 2022 concert moments:

1. Foxes showed that some people had forgotten how to behave at gigs in the two years without any - the most egregious being the woman listening to WhatsApp voice notes, without headphones, in the front row.

2. Sigrid was unfortunately timed directly after such a great gig the night before, and off the back of a full day in London, I was tired, achy and grumpy.

3. This should've had more gigs to choose from. We planned a trip to Germany to see a couple of Aly & AJ gigs in March which were cancelled; we ducked out of Wet Leg in April because I really didn't see the hype; Dana had to miss the Olivia Rodrigo and CRJ gigs because of real life getting in the way; Pale Waves cancelled an in store because one of the band was ill; we didn't go to Sugababes because I was ill; and finally didn't attempt six hours of travel for Tove Lo because of rail strikes.

Football survey 2023

Started this last year, so why not make it a tradition? Top 5 games of the year? Arsenal 3 Chelsea 1, 4th March, Selhurst Park (Continental ...