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Rise and Fall
Written by NormEmerges on Sunday, 21st Apr 2019 14:39

Like my father, I was born and bred in Suffolk. He was a lifetime Ipswich Town supporter. But when I was a boy, back in the 1950s, like many small boys I followed clubs at the top of the old First Division.

At the time, I recall, I was particularly fond of Burnley and then Wolves – things were a bit different at the top of the league in those days.

Wolves attracted my attention because I liked the colour of the shirt and because I liked animals. Such is the way with small boys.

Then Ipswich got promoted to the Second Division and in the first season there my father took me to see my first league match. I think it was against Blackburn and we won 2-1. I was completely hooked and have been an avid supporter ever since.

I was enthralled by our promotion and then our stunning success under Alf Ramsey, as the only team to win the old First Division on their first ever season in it, and then disappointed at our relegation again almost straight away. And then delighted when we got back into the top flight, and began to flourish under Bobby Robson.

By now I was working in London and would go to most of our away matches at London clubs. I’ve been there for good results at Tottenham, Arsenal, West Ham and Chelsea.

I had to watch Match of the Day on my honeymoon night as the featured match involved Ipswich Town. I was riveted watching us on the telly win the FA Cup and then the UEFA Cup.

Amazingly, we never lost at home in any of the European competitions, having beaten at Portman Road the likes of Barcelona, Real Madrid, and both Milan clubs.

Then we lost Bobby Robson and the big money started to sideline smaller clubs. We sank back into the Championship and there we’ve largely stayed ever since. Until now.

Being a football supporter is a strange thing. Unless you support one of the top clubs, which most of us don’t, you have to be used to disappointment.

A friend of mine has been a lifelong supporter of Manchester United, despite never having been to Manchester. Like me, as a small boy, he followed one of the top teams, but unlike me never grew out of it.

He is now disgruntled at the lack of success of his club – this for a team still vying for the top places in the league and still regularly playing in Europe. He should be so lucky.

The rest of us learn to accept that our teams’ fortunes ebb and flow from year to year. We learn to accept disasters, even ones like getting relegated, and keep looking to the future with undimmed optimism, even when unsupported by realistic assessments of the facts.

That's how come I’m now already looking forward to next season. Perhaps we’ll be winning regularly again and Saturday afternoons will be less dampened by disappointment.

We do after all have some very promising youngsters who should be improving year on year. We have some decent quality Championship players who have spent far too much of this season in the treatment room. We have the facilities, the stadium, and, I trust, a canny manager.

We may be in a lower position than at any time for the past 60-odd years, but I feel the opportunity for success is better than for at least the last 20 or so!




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monty_radio added 15:51 - Apr 21
Loved the imaginative yet grounded description of the successes; not so carried along by the reasons to be cheerful - but still, here's to not being "dampened by disappointment".
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ChrisFelix added 18:26 - Apr 21
Very true words. I to had a div 1 favourite but I was always going to watch the Town. With the money now available at the top ( Palace have a striker earning £130k a week ) the little clubs have to survive by being prudent. Mind you there can only be one premiership winner, so there will be a lot of losers among the elite.
I pride myself of following a special club & would never watch or follow any other club, despite living a fair number of years away from Suffolk
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Cakeman added 07:02 - Apr 22
A very nice read.
Memories of looking forward to watching us as a featured game on Match of the Day came flooding back.
I also looked forward to Match of the Week on Sunday’s with Gerry Harrison commentating.
In those days the commentators kept it factual and simple. None of this over analysing by ex Prima-Donna players.
Match of the Week was for the local games although I could never understand how it used to include the likes of Hull City and Luton Town. East Anglia must have been geographically lager then.
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Cakeman added 07:03 - Apr 22
Larger not lager!
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ElephantintheRoom added 08:53 - Mar 27
What a lovely blog - and amazingly your football journey with Town mirrors mine, right down to the first game - also against Blackburn. I too worked in London and used to meet up with old university chums at all the London grounds and took Town's eminence almost for granted. And I too merely see Ipswich Town as back where they were when my dad first started dragging me and my milk crate to Portman Road. Alas Town HAVE lost at home in European competition - to Port Vale in the Anglo Italian League - were you not there? Joking of course - but a lot of European home games now are just as meaningless as that Port Vale game now, so home wins in Europe are not the precious commodity they once were. You could add John Wark's European scoring record which stood for a number of years until it was devalued by expanded European competition. Strangely, as I look back through the rose-tinted memory banks it is THAT win in the Texaco Cup that still gives me perhaps the greatest pleasure.
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