Can't help but think they've picked the

Or is it fair enough with Reading's traditional rivals being Aldershot? Either way the A420 derby doesn't really have a ring to it.
by Red » 07 Mar 2012 10:18
by TBM » 07 Mar 2012 10:35
by Wax Jacket » 07 Mar 2012 10:51
by Fox Talbot » 07 Mar 2012 11:42
Wax Jacket yep you're on the wrong track here Redders I'm afraid, it's the big one for the fans of those two clubs
by FiNeRaIn » 07 Mar 2012 11:53
FiNeRaIn Can't take any of the rivalry's round here serious, all too middle class. Big city derby's are the only good ones.
by Red » 07 Mar 2012 12:33
Red Really? What do you mean by "Prwoper nawty" (sounds like something NSML would say)
Admittedly I ask as someone who's never been to the fixture, but I must say I'm inclined to take the unusual position of agreeing with finerain.
by Cobi » 07 Mar 2012 12:56
by Red » 07 Mar 2012 13:06
No Fixed AbodeRed Really? What do you mean by "Prwoper nawty" (sounds like something NSML would say)
Admittedly I ask as someone who's never been to the fixture, but I must say I'm inclined to take the unusual position of agreeing with finerain.
Nawty in terms of trouble. I recall leaving the Manor Ground after a midweek game, Reading were mob handed - stormed up the road past the crown green bowling place and caused carnage at the top of the road (with the junction of the main road) near the pub. Pub was smashed up, police horses charging everyone. Some of the worst trouble I've witnessed.
by From Despair To Where? » 07 Mar 2012 13:09
by Stuka » 07 Mar 2012 13:20
From Despair To Where? I was always told by Swindon fans when I worked there that the Oxford-Swindon rivalry was centred a lot around the Rover factories that used to be in both towns, especially when there was a strike in Oxford and Rover brought in scab labour from Swindon to break it, something that went to the very core of the respective communities deeper than football.
by Red » 07 Mar 2012 13:34
From Despair To Where? I was always told by Swindon fans when I worked there that the Oxford-Swindon rivalry was centred a lot around the Rover factories that used to be in both towns, especially when there was a strike in Oxford and Rover brought in scab labour from Swindon to break it, something that went to the very core of the respective communities deeper than football.
by Stuka » 07 Mar 2012 13:53
by grey_squirrel » 07 Mar 2012 19:13
From Despair To Where? I was always told by Swindon fans when I worked there that the Oxford-Swindon rivalry was centred a lot around the Rover factories that used to be in both towns, especially when there was a strike in Oxford and Rover brought in scab labour from Swindon to break it, something that went to the very core of the respective communities deeper than football.
by Platypuss » 07 Mar 2012 19:16
grey_squirrelFrom Despair To Where? I was always told by Swindon fans when I worked there that the Oxford-Swindon rivalry was centred a lot around the Rover factories that used to be in both towns, especially when there was a strike in Oxford and Rover brought in scab labour from Swindon to break it, something that went to the very core of the respective communities deeper than football.
That is absolutely correct + in the '70's they played each other a lot more than we did each.
I know lifelong Swindon and Oxford supporters and they just laugh at the suggestion of us being their rivals. They couldn;t give a hoot about Reading. A bit like us and Bournemouth.
by Jerry St Clair » 07 Mar 2012 19:40
Platypuss How long is lifelong in that context, though? Oxford United didn't even exist until 1960, and weren't a league team for a few more years. Somehow I don't believe Swindon had a massive rivalry with Headington United before then.....
by Jerry St Clair » 07 Mar 2012 19:45
Red Again using words like "carnage" and "trouble" doesn't really paint the scene for me here.
I'm still imagining a few middle aged blokes with receding hair lines and beer bellies, a lot of gesturing, and a little bit of fisticuffs between a handful of gelled hair youths. And the police over reacting.
by grey_squirrel » 07 Mar 2012 19:52
Jerry St ClairPlatypuss How long is lifelong in that context, though? Oxford United didn't even exist until 1960, and weren't a league team for a few more years. Somehow I don't believe Swindon had a massive rivalry with Headington United before then.....
Biscuits and Royals, the David Downs book, says that before Oxford entered the league in the 60s there would usually be a handful of Tappins coaches bringing supporters down from Oxfordshire to watch Reading games. He describes the sight of "a line of orange coaches lined up on Norfolk Road".
When Oxford entered the league, these coaches pretty much disappeared and it's assumed that these supporters started going to the Manor instead of Elm Park. I guess a lot of time has passed, but I'd say nicking another club's supporters is decent grounds for animosity.
by From Despair To Where? » 07 Mar 2012 21:03
grey_squirrelFrom Despair To Where? I was always told by Swindon fans when I worked there that the Oxford-Swindon rivalry was centred a lot around the Rover factories that used to be in both towns, especially when there was a strike in Oxford and Rover brought in scab labour from Swindon to break it, something that went to the very core of the respective communities deeper than football.
That is absolutely correct + in the '70's they played each other a lot more than we did each.
I know lifelong Swindon and Oxford supporters and they just laugh at the suggestion of us being their rivals. They couldn;t give a hoot about Reading. A bit like us and Bournemouth.
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