Have that, you vegetable waving, statue-boarding frauds. You penalty spot scuffing modern football mercenaries. To Luton Town, the legacy club in the legacy ground with the legacy players, the spoils.
This week they finally gave us our name, the people who go. The men and women, girls and boys who create the backdrop for their content, the narrative arc for their debt-servicing, revenue stream of social unconsciousness.
Legacy fans.
If you’re new here, these two words are an achingly accurate
description of how this thing of ours has moved away from its places of birth.
In a game that has always thrived on the tension between the haves and the have-nots,
confirmation that - to those in power - all fans are equal but some are much more
equal than others, came as little surprise.
The return of our historic derby with no real name (it’s
just Luton Watford alright, motorway twats) was a case in point.
Out there on the internet you find them. Lurking in the replies,
the e-gaming, player avi, AFTV gif-ing children of Hertfordshire’s more recently
procured Premier League customer base. They appear to have only learned of their
Legacy Rivalry this year and, anyway, it’s irrelevant to them.
From what I can make out they mainly want to show you their Channel:
CHECK OUT MY CHANNEL “GUYS” they say, and "announce player" every day
until the net spend is visible to the naked eye from Dubai. They probably aren’t
that different to the rest of us, but they’ve spent a lot of time at home, and
got the superfast fibre a bit too young. In the logic of the European Super
Leaguers they are the fans of the future. And they want to purchase your in-game
tokens. Not go outside.
But we know that even at a European football manager supply
teacher experiment like Watford - where they salivate at the prospect of their
quarterly sacking by calling-on the new manager bounce: “We’re gonna bounce in a minute” they strain, like a nightmarish meth riddled rotary club coach trip
to Mrs Brown’s Boys - we know that without the Legacy lot, there is nothing
left.
Because while Man United’s brand lock ups might carry merchandise
sales from Nigeria to Nicaragua, for the rest of us – Hatters and Hornets
alike, the legacy must endure. It’s the whole point.
That’s why the sight of Saturday’s heroes tearing into
their enemy with the fight of a team playing in front of a throbbing Kenilworth
Road was, even in its socially distant state, a thing of startling, cathartic
beauty.
What we lacked in the away game we had in allotment
spattered spades this time. He got them fired up, but it quickly transpired Nathan
also had them set up the right way. Eli stretched and pressed, while Kaz
and Berry’s extra touches and direct breaks terrorised and tormented a vacant Watford
XI, who looked confused at the sheer relentlessness of it all. They hadn’t come here
for this. Where were they again?
There were stars all over the pitch, but Pelly showed once
again that he’s well capable of bossing Championship influencers in the same
way he once dominated conference journeymen. And Sluga had less to do than the
bar staff in the Nick Owen. Not a solitary shot on target was registered against
legacy Luton from the non league. The shame.
What the venture capitalists of the Super League have
overlooked is that this “legacy” game with its rivalries and its pathetic,
family defining grudges, has been quietly and determinedly reinventing itself
over the past 15 years. Luton’s model is not rocket science, it’s a set of
values forged in looking over modern football’s cliff edge and taking a
different road.
Those with longer memories know that our latest redemption
is part of a natural rebalancing act we’ve long performed in English football.
And we’re not the only ones. The glory of the rollercoaster.
The down decades and the up. The empty stands and the full. The town on its
arse, its toes and on cloud fucking nine. This is the game.
It still belongs to us and it’s worth fighting for.
Funnily enough, I was thinking about you and 'these are the good old days' today.
ReplyDeleteMagnificent again, and a thousand thanks for 'meth riddled'.
Just love your dispatches, Kev. So well written and full of poignancy. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteSherborne Hatter.
Hi mate would you drop me a line I have a proposition for you regarding your blogs
ReplyDeleteAlright mate, want to drop me a DM on twitter?
DeleteAmazing. Just everything captured so beautifully. Keep it coming!
ReplyDelete