Dave, interesting but I'm more interested in what you
thought today ? You were pretty depressed after last
week. As an optimist you MUST have enjoyed today. I
thought we were brilliant for 70 mins. 



--- DAVID NATTAN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> If you closed your eyes just for a moment and forgot
> all about the reality of the league table, the
> financial meltdown, the off-field bickering, life at
> Elland Road did not look as crummy as all that. An
> angelic looking blonde girl with pig tails played
> tag with her Leeds-shirted brother around Billy
> Bremner's statue. The queue to get into the club
> shop that has a sale on was healthy. A couple
> merrily scoffed their pre-match chips underneath the
> bronze plaque commemorating Bremner, Don Revie, and
> the FA Cup won by the old team of legend. There was,
> believe it or not, a buzz around the place.
>   Everybody knew this match had the feel of do or
> die. To the immense elation of the locals, Leeds
> found it in them to do enough. This win did not come
> without its moment of high anxiety, as Luton were
> awarded a penalty with four minutes to go. 
>   The noise that cascaded around the place when
> Casper Ankergren plunged to parry Dean Morgan's spot
> kick was raw and wild. It ensured that Richard
> Cresswell's 50th-minute goal, scored through sheer
> will as much as skill, gives them glimmer of light. 
>  But only a glimmer. They remain bottom. Now there
> are nine games to go. Nine games to somehow avoid
> the drop and prevent the worst nightmare in the
> history of Leeds United. They have never before sunk
> as low as English football's third tier. It starts
> for them at Leicester on Tuesday, followed by a trip
> on Saturday to Southend, who are one place and one
> point above them.   How dearly they needed this
> boost. The last few weeks have been a tale of Leeds
> disunited as the captain Kevin Nicholls has asked to
> leave - he was absent here, but not forgotten in
> understandably rude terrace chants; an unnamed
> player was accused of leaking details of the team to
> the opposition and the chairman Ken Bates through a
> splurge of fighting talk
>  has exacerbated behind-the-scenes problems.   At
> last weekend's match Bates, in a not untypical show
> of belligerence, used his programme notes to publish
> the address of a former club director Melvyn Levi.
> The two men are entangled in a legal dispute and
> Bates saw fit to describe Levi as 'the enemy
> within'.   Levi duly served an injunction on this
> weekend's programme that was lifted only on the
> morning of the match. But Bates's latest missive was
> so abrasive somebody at the club thought it prudent
> to cross out a paragraph with marker pen in all
> 8,500 programmes. Not that it was not a doddle to
> read another of the many jibes about Levi through
> the hastily applied ink anyway.   Many supporters
> have a different view about quite who is the enemy
> within. A worrying number are staying away, unable
> to bring themselves to come to the games while Bates
> is running the club. These range from individuals,
> such as Mark, a former home-and-away season-ticket
> holder, who won't return to
>  Elland Road under the current regime, to groups,
> such as the East Anglia supporters club that, not so
> long ago, would bring three coaches to matches and
> now struggle to fill a minibus.   The club seldom
> bother to open the upper tier of the East stand any
> more. Marching on together? For some it is more akin
> to trudging off alone and wallowing in
> disillusionment.   Bates has alienated the official
> supporters club, preferring to set up a new members'
> club that costs £47 to join and includes such
> privileges as the right to buy tickets and gain
> entry to a smart members' bar on matchday. There is
> also a 10 per cent discount on purchases in the
> shop, some free magazines and a Christmas card.
> Forgive me if my sense of economics is not hugely
> refined, but that does not seem an awful lot for
> £47.   The attendance was a respectable 27,138,
> helped by the reduction in ticket prices to £15.
> Generally, though, figures suggest that around
> 10,000 have drifted away since the club dropped
>  out of the Premiership in 2004. The crowds held up
> quite well at first, averaging 30,000 in their first
> year of exile. That has fallen to an average of
> 20,000 in this season of radical decline.   Rank
> performances on the pitch, a lack of players for
> supporters to identify with and hiked-up ticket
> prices have contributed to the number of punters who
> have drifted away.   Considering this season has
> been the story of 42 players, three managers, one
> volatile chairman, thousands of lost supporters and
> endless tales of woe, is it any wonder the club sit
> bottom of the table?   Think about it for a moment.
> Some 42 players have pulled on the shirt for Leeds
> this season. That is almost enough for four separate
> teams. There has been a constant stream of loaned
> journeymen, the latest being yesterday's debutant,
> Lubomir Michalik, the Slovak who joined from Bolton.
> It is hardly the blueprint for success. Leeds
> haven't won successive league games all season.  
> The financial problems are,
>  according to Bates, coming to an end. He has stated
> that by the end of this season, the club will be
> debt-free and no longer paying off ex-employees. It
> beggars belief that they are still funding salaries
> for players such as Robbie Fowler and Danny Mills.
> Up until last year they were still paying three
> ex-managers in David O'Leary, Terry Venables and
> Peter Reid.   How far back do we need to go to trace
> the moment the club's descent became inexorable? Is
> it when Peter Ridsdale got so out of his depth
> following the dream? Is it when the debts were
> reformed into bonds that required the fire sale of a
> promising team? Is it when Jonathan Woodgate and Lee
> Bowyer were implicated in a protracted court case?
> Is it when Gerald Krasner's consortium did their bit
> for the debts by selling the stadium and the Thorp
> Arch training ground? Or is it when Bates took over
> and started doing things in his own inimitable
> style?   Surveying the wreckage of this ailing club,
> it pays to look at the
>  bigger picture and remind yourself not just that it
> is six years since they were in the semi-finals of
> the Champions League with a team of internationals.
> But also, Leeds have won the English title more
> recently than Liverpool. Leeds were the team to last
> conquer the game in this country with an English
> manager in Howard Wilkinson.   In the cutting words
> of the travelling Luton fans squeezed into one
> corner: 'You're not famous any more.' Actually
> that's not strictly true. The club are still famous.
> But the team are barely recognisable from the
> heights of yesteryear.
> _______________________________________________
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> it's a God awful small affair
> 



                
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