THE BIN BANG THEORY
It’s amazing what a couple of drum sticks can do. With the club realising that the towns invention of the wheelie bin is something worth banging on about, we now have our own one to help make some noise at Arbour Park and get behind the team.
Under the lights for the first time this season against Bath City was fantastic. And we got to sing Slough invention classics such as ‘You’ve got Bath Spas, We’ve got Mars Bars’ and ‘You had the Romans, we discovered Uranus’ which in the cold light of day doesn’t rhyme even slightly. Trying to sing songs about Thunderbirds, zebra crossing, snooker and Slough Trading Estate is proving a little trickier and we are open to suggestions. No, not you can stick that annoying drumstick up your...
Talking of Uranus, I do remember getting into a spot of bother when the Herschel Grammar school magazine we edited celebrated Sir William Herschel's discovery by asking on the front cover ‘Have you looked up Uranus today?’ What witty teenagers we were.
Ironically the extra noise has increased at the same time as our crowds have nose dived with the attendance at Concord our lowest in the National League ever on a Saturday, taking our average to below 600 for the season.
Covid has obviously played a big part in our dip in attendances but it’s more than that. I often pop into the Grill Garden on Stoke Road before the game for an halloumi burger. The décor is a mish-mash of what the town is now about. Inside is a mural with Thunderbirds and the trading estate taking centre stage with a sign on the counter saying they are closed Friday for an hour for Jumu’ah prayer. Next time I’m in I will bring them a poster and that’s something we should all be doing for the club, getting posters up around town and spreading the Rebel gospel. Better still if we should bring back the free tickets, to tempt people to a game for the first time. Extra people means extra cash for golden goal tickets, refreshments and food.
In the early 70’s when Slough were a very successful team, Bishop Stortfords programme included an article in which home supporters suggested collective nouns appropriate for the followers of opposing teams. Ours was "a misery of Slough supporters". But no more! How about bin-bangers?
I’ve always been interested in the psychology of crowds. How just a few people can sway a crowd for better or worse at events and demonstrations, but its never more clearer than with football fans who can either get behind their team or give them earache when things inevitable don’t go their way. Football can make us feel we belong which clubs also use to make us do or say anything to defend their team. Newcastle fans were on it Saturday against Brighton. A game so boring even Match of the Day refused to show it. They targeted one of the Albion players whose up on police charges, while conveniently forgetting that their new owners don’t even bother with any of that judicial nonsense and go straight to imprison, torture, kill for anyone who dares cross them. Maybe the Geordies were being ironic.
So I was pleased to hear one supporter say that after we clapped off our players after the defeat to Ebbsfleet, that this was a team he wanted to support. It’s easy to get behind your team when they’re winning, a lot less so when things aren’t quite going to plan. It’s also a lot more fun!
Crowd psychology can be seen in the wearing of masks. When our Prime Minister can’t be bothered to wear one while sitting next to 95 year old David Attenborough or when visiting a hospital is it any wonder so many people don’t bother on public transport. It’s such an easy thing to do to stop the spread of covid yet you’d have thought people were being asked to rub cheese graters across their faces.
Car driving is another thing. We all want to do something about climate change as long as we don’t have to give up anything. I’ve heard Slough drivers blame roadworks, bus lanes, marsbar wrappers in the road for traffic jams and yet for a town dominated by roads - surrounded by motorways and intersected by dual carriageways - it’s still gridlocked half the time. Maybe, just maybe its because there are too many cars and like so many places needs millions invested in public transport. The town is crying out for trams – we could even take one all the way along the Bath Road next time we get to visit Bath.
And that’s the thing, if we all changed diets and recycled and bought less crap – well it’s the right thing to do but 100 corporations cause 71% of global emissions and its they and governments who really have to change. Otherwise as the Prime Minister of Barbados pointed out at COP26 - a 2% increase in sea levels will mean the death sentence for the people of Maldives, Antigua, Barbados, Fiji, Kenya, Mozambique and Samoa. Meanwhile residents of major cities across the world from Amsterdam to New Orleans to Bangkok will be catching the boat to work by 2030. Infact our last home opponents Concord Rangers must be looking nervously over their sea wall at the massive container ships that go past and wonder just how long they’ve got left before their ground goes down the plughole.
Humans are innovative, adaptable and as we saw when the pandemic struck can be kind and caring when it matters. We will have to be all these things if we want to stop climate chaos. So I will keep banging the drum for a better world – and for a better atmosphere at Slough games.
Otherwise we will soon start having to travel to games in an amber submarine.
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