Monday 9 September 2013

Stockholm Syndrome




You may have noticed that since June 19th, the small matter of 11 weeks ago, I’ve only made 3 blog posts about Newcastle United, with two of those Straky Do Toho (http://payaso-de-mierda.blogspot.co.uk/2013/07/straky-do-toho.html) and False Memory Syndrome (http://payaso-de-mierda.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/false-memory-syndrome.html) being nostalgic pieces about the Inter Toto Cup in 2005 and the Portsmouth home game in October 1990 respectively. The only one to deal with the recent goings-on at St. James’ Park, Herding Cats (http://payaso-de-mierda.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/herding-cats.html), was actually penned for #9 fanzine, which I hope you’ve all signed up for, meaning this is the first post about the farcical institution on Barrack Road since June 19th, when Jesus Fucking Krist (http://payaso-de-mierda.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/jesus-fucking-krist.html), written in response to an appointment that is beyond parody and beneath contempt, achieved the distinction of being my second most read blog  post ever, since I established the site in July 2010. To fight against charges of inattention or indeed dereliction of duty occasioned by my lack of direct comment over the summer, I feel I must explain the reasons for such relative inactivity on my part. It isn’t because of the supposed absence of football action to pass judgement or, more likely, pour scorn on, as the off pitch events relating to Newcastle United are of far greater interest and importance than the frankly banal attempts of 10 men in black and white shirts to do anything creative or even useful with an inflated pig’s bladder.

Certainly my dog days media silence has nothing to do with any possible personal diminution of interest in the affairs of the club, which is a common theme I am hearing, with deepening anguish on my part, from increasing numbers of long term fans; why else would a sizeable percentage of season ticket holders of my acquaintance sack off the home game with Fulham to go and watch the England versus Australia 20/20 cricket at the Riverside? A test match I could understand, but to choose pyjama party cricket over an NUFC home game shows a few lines have been crossed, which doesn’t bode well for the future. Indeed, I’m beginning to detect among certain of my acquaintances a feeling of self-satisfaction (perhaps it’s relief?) when they can find a plausible reason not to attend a home game; Mike Ashley has caused that you know.

From my arms-length perspective, it seems that home games have now become relatively unsuccessful social events, whereby middle aged men in leather jackets, replica shirts, crimpelene Primark slacks and slip-on, tasselled loafers meet similarly attired middle men they’ve befriend on the internet and drink pasteurised beer, while making vague promises of organising games of golf, while their younger Hollister-clad descendants guzzle Blue WKD in Shark Bar and sing “witty” songs about Shola Ameobi. Eventually, they troop up to SJP and sit in mute boredom as badly coached and poorly motivated players go through the motions in order to pick up enormous sums of money. Mind, the NUFC squad are a study in motivation compared to Fulham’s front pairing of Bent and Berbatov; however no longer can we use the term “mercenary” as pejorative term for footballers. These days it is simplay a factual description of them all.

This sorry state of affairs manifests itself on average once a fortnight, as the club sinks deeper in to the mire; obviously if anyone points this depressing fact out or tries to fight back against the regime, socially inadequate keyboard warriors gleefully seize on the personal lives of those brave enough to stand up and be counted, regarding them as legitimate targets for abusive, on-line invective that cannot be answered as the perpetrators remain hidden behind a cyber-cloak of anonymity. The on-line response to the replacement of the Leazes Gates was particularly foul, though I have to say, the club played  NUFC Fans United as patsies in this instance; affixing the gates to the wall like a kind of high-specification, wrought-iron climbing frame was a non-too-subtle 2 fingered gesture in the face of those who had tried to maintain a dignified channel of communication with the club; exactly how Lee Marshall, the club’s Fans’ Liaison officer views this is probably a matter for conjecture.

The fact is, I won’t be at SJP in the near future, barring the totally unlikely situation of a home tie in the 4th round of the League Cup during October half term, because the rearrangement of fixtures for television purposes has resulted in the bizarre scenario of zero Sunday home games during the remainder of 2013, meaning my non-league commitments with Heaton Stannington will preclude me from setting foot inside St. James’ Park until Boxing Day when Stoke City arrive in town. However, please do not ever dare to assume that my proposed non-attendance, as well as lack of blog posts over the summer, can be explained away by a lack of passion for the team.

It would have been all too easy to post up a weekly tirade against Ashley, Kinnear and Pardew, for that is my analysis of the order of culpability when it comes to apportioning blame for the shambles that Newcastle United currently resembles, all of which would have scarcely altered from mid-June until late August: we haven’t signed anyone, the club ownership refuses to comment about anything while the director of football and manager seem to be engaged in a contest to see who can spout the most inane,  revisionist bollocks about the recent history of Newcastle United would have been my stock-in-trade items for discussion. All of the previous points have the utmost validity and indeed veracity, but as the pre-season tortuously dragged on I found I was partly insanely busy helping my mother move house (with the valued practical help of the Mike Ashley Out Campaign, who are dab hands at reassembling dining tables I have to say; cheers Graeme!!), which cut down the hours available to me to think, plan, write  and revise articles about NUFC, though mainly I found I was not inclined to speculate or second guess on the motives and intentions of the club in the short, medium or long term, in the continued absence of any meaningful communication from the soi-disant hierarchy  to outline this, until we had reached a point whereby it seemed natural, timely and necessary to respond to the situation. This decision did not necessarily mean I was in a rush to express myself after a ball was competitively kicked or even uncompetitively, as in the case of the opening day capitulation at CoMS.

I have to say that I’ve not seen a single second of live Newcastle United action this season. I took no pleasure in accurately calling the 4-0 defeat on the opening day at Manchester City, though I did enjoy the cycle from High Heaton to Tynemouth that I opted for instead of an evening in the company of griping dullards in the pub, as the journey engaged me from the moment the first goal went in until the score had reached its final tally, by which time frustration had given way to acceptance tinged with gallows humour. Though reflecting on that opening obliteration, I realise that at this point I could, and perhaps should, engage in a 4,000 word tirade against the oafish conduct of the most embarrassing player on the club’s books, Steven Taylor, but what would be the point? Anyone among the support with a scintilla of self-awareness knows that Taylor’s lack of dignity and repeated immature confusion of passion with petulance makes him an object of scorn in the eyes of all clued-in supporters.

At least in the aftermath, the only buffoon blaming the loss on Cabaye’s non-appearance was the joker in the dug-out. The farcical events relating to the eventual failure to sell Cabaye by the end of the transfer window, when by all reliable accounts, only a disinclination on the part of Arsenal to pay the required £20m fee for a player they saw as a squad member and not the fulcrum of their side the player in question no doubt believes himself to be, resulted in the continuation of a loveless, doomed marriage between club and Cabaye, and turned the West Ham game almost into a sideshow, as news of a fresh bid from the Emirates was awaited. Certainly Gouffran’s miss seemed more akin to the kind of slapstick, knockabout farce one sees in a clown show than at a football match, though without the tragicomic undertones relating to the appalling state of affairs that means Shola Ameobi continues to command a starting place for a side in the Premier League, 4 months after Pardew announced it was time for him to find a new club. I do concede that even Shola would have scored the one Gouffran missed, which I hope isn’t used as a stick to beat the talented and diligent ex Bourdeaux man (who isn’t a central striker, Pardew) with by the already radged-up Francophobes in les maillots jaunes down le couloir de la haine. There is certainly a case for suggesting we should keep all our players (bar the woeful Shane Ferguson who has thankfully departed to Birmingham City, hopefully never to return,) and get shot of a load of our most idiotic fans, whether they set off flares at away games, drink in The Forth or both.

Doing a spot of early season groundhopping (Gateshead Redheugh 4 Bedlington Terriers 0 in the Northern Alliance Division 1 at the vastly improved Eslington Park, which reminds me very much of Monkchester Green, the home of Walker Central), I missed the Morecambe game, though travelling westwards on the 49C for my last ever night on Western Way at full time, I caught up with the Twitterati’s posturing anguish as Marveaux failed again in his occasional walk-on role as Lionel Messi’s Tyneside-based dauphin. I’d imagined a 3-1 win in advance of the game, so the eventual margin of victory was the same, even if the sub-standard performance caused a few raised eyebrows. Leeds at home in the next round eh? I’m at work that night, but I still wouldn’t be going, because there comes a point when you simply have to stand up and be counted, by saying no to any further personal complicity in the disgraceful charade that the current regime is responsible for. As I pointed out at the start of False Memory Syndrome, I had no intention of using the tickets I won for the Fulham game, the fourth consecutive season I’d acquired freebies for that fixture, though typically enough Ben and his mate had a better time watching 30 minutes of fluent football at the end than I did as The Stan lost 1-0 at home to Stokesley, though that is coincidental.

My mantra is unchanging; it is irrelevant who plays for Newcastle United, who is sold, who is bought or even who manages the club. Indeed the eventual finishing place for the club in 2013/2014 and the performance in the cups are also irrelevant. The only thing that matters is getting rid of Ashley; by that I don’t mean replace him with another alleged benevolent despot venture capitalist billionaire; I mean urge Ashley to abandon the club and to give it to the fans. If this means he takes out his £130m loan and we end up in League 2, so be it; if Newcastle United become 100% fan owned, as we must surely be, it does not matter to me whether we then call FCUM or Barcelona as our closest rivals, because we will be a club reborn. Yes Pardew is a shifty, smarmy, weasel-worded, tactically-incompetent invertebrate; yes Kinnear is a loudmouthed, deceitful, bellicose bullshitter, but they don’t matter in the wider context of things,  though I would never call for Pardew’s dismissal as the identity of his successor is as obvious as it is appalling. It’s important not to despair about our current situation (if Gouffran had scored we’d be top 4 incidentally) and keep our eyes on the eventual long-term target; we have to get rid of Ashley. Once that has been achieved, we can address the question of the Vichy Magpie regime, in the full knowledge that incompetent functionaries and minions can be replaced and forgotten about

I spent the evening of September 2nd at Team Northumbria 0 Marske United 2, concentrating fully on the game, while many of those surrounding me engaged in endless smartphone interaction and idle conversation with other spectators about the looming transfer deadline. Obviously,  my philosophical standpoint made it an irrelevance; the comings and goings of players didn’t advance the date of Ashley’s departure one iota, so I didn’t allow myself to become irate. I was more annoyed with myself for assuming the Team North game kicked off at 7.45; it didn’t and by the time I got there, Marske had scored both goals. However, Alan Pardew’s statement in relation to Newcastle United’s utter lack of permanent player acquisition in the period July 1st – September 2nd 2013 did raise my hackles slightly. This is what he said, via the club’s official website -:

“We are delighted to have brought Loïc Rémy to the club in this window and we believe he will form an exciting and effective partnership with Papiss Cissé. Joe has worked hard on numerous targets, particularly an additional offensive player. However, some of the options that were available within our financial means were not as good as the players we already had and there is no point bringing in new players unless they can improve us and take us forward. We did the majority of our business in the January window, signing five excellent first-team players. With the strong squad we have we should all approach the season in a positive, optimistic frame of mind.”

It would be frankly ludicrous to dignify this abject tissue of horseshit by seeking to claim that while we may disagree with it, at least Pardew has communicated with the fans and explained his philosophy, because unless he’s Saul on the road to Damascus, his tune has changed so much in 10 days as to be unrecognizable. One wonders just how this official statement squares with his utterance of August 23rd; “We have to make sure we get one or two transfers over the line before deadline." Or, perhaps even more telling, his detailed response to last season’s shortcomings, issued in his post-match press conference after the final game at home to Arsenal on May 20th -:

"We're very, very lucky to have the support that we got and therefore we owe them a debt next year to make sure that we serve up a better standard of football and better quality of results. We know, in that (dressing) room, we’ve got 80 per cent of the team. We still need to make sure we get two or three recruits in there which take us forward. If we can do that, they’ll grow as well, and we’ll be much, much better next year.You hear managers taking about needing three players to make the perfect side but we genuinely, genuinely need a couple in that first team that complement the others."

As I pointed out back in June, the contempt in which Pardew was held by many of our fans was replaced by a sense of pity following Kinnear’s appointment. If Pardew had either resigned, on account of the fact he is obviously undermined and utterly without authority in the club, or just stood up and told the truth, the support would have respect for him. Such mealy-mouthed twaddle does him no favours whatsoever and I’d venture he is viewed with even greater scorn than he was at the end of last season. Though his words seem positively bombastic when compared to the simpering, hand-wringing otiose oratory from the discredited, ideologically bankrupt NUST who issued this grovelling, small minded press release, to universal contempt -:

Newcastle fans have reacted in disbelief to the events of this summer. To say the return of Joe Kinnear was 'surprising' would be the understatement of the millennium. At a time when every other Premier League club is strengthening their squad, it defies belief that Newcastle United's is numerically weaker than the one that finished last season. To not make one player purchase this summer is astounding and calls into question the ambition of Mike Ashley and those tasked to run Newcastle United on his behalf. A squad that narrowly avoided relegation is now once again left right on the edge with no margin for error, only two or three injuries in key positions would lead to potential disaster. NUST hope that one day we will see a management structure worthy of the name at St.James' Park and the club run with the ambition to match that of the fans, the same fans who make Newcastle United the tenth best supported club in Europe. While in addition the money the supporters plough into the club has helped push NUFC back into the top twenty football club turnovers in the world.

Returning to Pardew, the only two explanations I can see for his lickspittle volte face are that he really has so little self-respect and dignity as a human being that he will do whatever he is told to by Kinnear and Ashley, simply to keep his job, or that he has somehow developed Stockholm Syndrome, which is a psychological phenomenon where hostages express empathy and sympathy and have positive feelings toward their captors, sometimes to the point of defending them. These feelings are generally considered irrational in light of the danger or risk endured by the victims, who essentially mistake a lack of abuse from their captors for an act of kindness.
 

Stockholm Syndrome is named after the Norrmalmstorg robbery of Kreditbanken at Norrmalmstorg in Stockholm, Sweden, in which several bank employees were held hostage in a bank vault from August 23 to August 28, 1973, while their captors negotiated with police. During this standoff, the victims became emotionally attached to their captors, rejected assistance from government officials at one point, and even defended their captors after they were freed from their six-day ordeal. In Pardew’s case, he’s had the 11 week ordeal of working with Kinnear and the 2 month one of the transfer window, but not to worry Alan; the window is shut and you don’t have to pretend you’ve got the cojones to ask Ashley for the cash to buy a player until January. Until then, let’s see if Shola, Sammi, Gosling and Williamson can show us exactly the sort of flair and panache a Premier league side needs.  Frankly, Pardew has gone from being a potential Jan Palach, who would have professionally self-immolated for the sake of the club’s future, to football’s version of Patti Hearst, helping the Sports Direct Symbionese Liberation Army to steal from the poor and give to the rich.

Despite Neil Cameron’s 10 questions for Ashley in Wednesday 4th September’s Evening Chronicle weren’t the Thompson House equivalent of Martin Luther’s Disputatio pro declaratione virtutis indulgentiarum, but they did show signs the paper has the potential pluck to stand up and ask the club the kind of hard questions Mark Brophy so astutely pointed out that they had singularly failed to do (http://markbrophy.wordpress.com/2013/09/04/chronicle-capitulation-to-wonga/), that evening’s  NUFC Fans United meeting almost made me question my faith in the organisation. Zero publicity on supposedly sympathetic websites or in the papers, meant a significantly lower turn-out than the previous 2 meetings; only 46 people showed up in The Irish Club to hear Lee Marshall alternatively presenting on-the-hoof response to Cameron’s questions and then attempting to present the club’s sponsors as the nearest we’d had to wealth distribution in this country since the 1945 Labour Government, while a couple of loudmouths in the audience asked irrelevant questions to the wrong people and some smarmy blow-ins tried to hijack the meeting for their own ends. That said, Robbo from The Shite Seats was utterly brilliant in his analysis of where NUFC Fans United needs to go next. Thus, it occurred to me that I was in danger of failing in to cynicism and despair in the way that so many others have. We need to keep the faith; I need to keep the faith. This club is 121 years old in December; we’ll be here a lot longer than Mike Ashley will be. We all need to remember that fact on a daily basis.

My passionate hope and my sincere belief is that the club will be better run and have its future properly safeguarded if we can get Ashley OUT and 100% Fan ownership IN. Therefore, after my personal summer of political inactivity that was almost as indefensible as the club’s lack of signings, the closing of the transfer window, during which time Newcastle United brought in one player who: turned us down in January to play for a club that were relegated, had no pre-season training, arrived injured, is on Police bail following an allegation of rape, is on a season long loan, seems to be a fairly sensible point at which to make my feelings known. I’ve written over 3,500 words in this blog, but they can be summed up in one sentence -:

Ashley OUT; 100% Fan Ownership IN
 

 

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