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Our most read article last week of March 17:34 - Apr 4 with 546 viewsKeithHaynes

That’s here.


Swansea City & Liam Walsh in perfect harmony 20th Mar 2023 08:00
Liam Walsh has played two games in less than a week, and not only has he come through those challenges more or less unscathed, the mental boost it gives him is going to be huge. You see, Liam hasn’t had the best of time at Swansea City, injuries and a poor loan to Hull acuity last season have taken their toll, but now it seems things are changing. 0


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Our most read article last week of March on 20:44 - Apr 4 with 479 viewsbuilthjack

Walsh has stepped in and shown he can hack it. There is a good player there.

Swansea Indepenent Poster Of The Year 2021. Dr P / Mart66 / Roathie / Parlay / E20/ Duffle was 2nd, but he is deluded and thinks in his little twisted brain that he won. Poor sod. We let him win this year, as he has cried for a whole year. His 14 usernames, bless his cotton socks.

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Our most read article last week of March on 21:14 - Apr 4 with 477 viewsFlashberryjack

Our most read article last week of March on 20:44 - Apr 4 by builthjack

Walsh has stepped in and shown he can hack it. There is a good player there.


Spot on.

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Our most read article last week of March on 21:30 - Apr 4 with 462 viewsWhiterockin

Our most read article last week of March on 21:14 - Apr 4 by Flashberryjack

Spot on.


This is worth recapping.

Liam Walsh by magicdaps10 14 Mar 2023 22:03
Taken off but I have to say, he looks a very decent player indeed.

Hopefully he can stay injury free and I have no doubt he can add something to us.

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Our most read article last week of March on 09:34 - Apr 5 with 383 viewsonehunglow

It’s like having a new player .
Great stuff

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Our most read article last week of March on 11:59 - Apr 5 with 352 viewswhiterock

Football is Culture, Swansea City

Swansea City is a Welsh football club playing in the English League at Championship level, recently it spent 7 seasons in the Premier League (2011-2018).

The poet Dylan Thomas described Swansea as an ‘ugly, lovely town’. He was not a sports fan but he might have said the same words of his hometown’s football club. For over a century, the Swans have entertained, delighted, frustrated, and angered fans.

The club is part of life in Swansea. It has decided what shifts were worked, when holidays were taken and even when weddings were held. Results on an afternoon have decided whether nights are for dancing or for moping. Families have been brought together by parents and grandparents passing on their love and loyalty to their next generation. Some choose to be Jacks, others have it forced upon them but appreciate it all the same.

Even for those not much interested in football, the Swans have always mattered. Football meant crowds to avoid and parking problems to complain about. It meant the annoyance or relief of family members disappearing for an afternoon. Yet no one had to go to the game to feel pride when the club did well or to hear the noise of cheering crowds drift across the city.

The Vetch Field, the club’s old ground was part of the landscape of Swansea, and its irregular floodlights gazed down upon Sandfields and across to the city centre. What it lacked in elegance, the Vetch made up for in character. It squeezed into a gap between houses that was too small but which ensured some gardens a free view over a wall. The East Stand didn’t fit behind the goal so it sneaked around a corner instead. The old wooden double decker was grand but had to come down because of the fire risk. The centre stand was rickety and uncomfortable; in its last days its roof showered its inhabitants with crumbling paint.

But it was the North Bank that was the heartbeat of the Vetch. That was the place where youngsters yearned to be old enough to stand, where the singing and cheering was loudest, where everyone had their spot surrounded by the same familiar faces each week. You might not know the name of the bloke in the old rain mac but you knew he had it in for the left back, what his favourite swear words were, and that he cared as much you did. The North Bank was rough and ready, sometimes vulgar, but always passionate.

The Vetch is no more and the Liberty Stadium is now home: a new, smart, slightly-stiff sweater to replace the comfortable, worn-out but well-loved one we wore for years. Some say it lacks the Vetch’s passion but everyone says the toilets are better. And slowly it’s making its own memories to be passed down to those too young to know what it was to stand on a crumbling football terrace.

At Vetch or Liberty, to watch the Swans was to be part of something bigger, an army, a tribe, a family. On Saturdays, or whenever the tv schedulers decided fit, we’ve cheered, we’ve chanted and clapped. We’ve taunted the visitors, declared our pride in Wales and our team, and sung for Super Johnny or whoever was our favourite at the time. And sometimes they more than repaid our love. When Curt did a turn, or Robbie hit a screamer, or Gylfi flicked a deadball, it was as beautiful as any of Dylan’s poetry, even if an old man might tell you later, ‘Ivor could do it better’.

It hasn’t always been like that. There have been plenty of defeats that caused us to curse and despair. Sometimes the men in white just weren’t good enough but the fans forgave that as long as those on the pitch cared as much as we did in the stands or terraces. Sometimes anger was aimed at the board, when fans thought they weren’t doing their best to create a team worthy of wearing the shirt. Sometimes the fans turned on each other, when someone was felt to be too critical or too quiet. At the Swans, everyone has their part to play.

The size of crowds have ebbed and flowed over the years. There’s only so much money to go round and not everyone wants to watch a team that’s struggling. But even when crowds were down to a few faithful thousand, the rest of Swansea didn’t stop caring. At ten past five on a Saturday, old ladies would still stop anyone in a scarf wandering through town and ask ‘How did the Swans get on?’ Because, in Swansea, football is part of our culture.
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