Some thoughts from The Big Clootie
Posted: Wed Dec 05, 2018 9:52 am
https://www.thecourier.co.uk/fp/sport/r ... re-a-clue/
I was attracted by a comment from a rugby-hating, football-covering friend of mine this week.
Scotland V Argentina at Murrayfield: The Scotland players huddle ahead of kick off.
He was deeply troubled by the 11th successive 67,200 sell-out of BT Murrayfield for last weekend’s final Autumn Test against Argentina. That’s every game for two full calendar years..
Meanwhile over at Hampden, still your other national stadium, the only sell-out for international football over the last two years was – unsurprisingly – the England World Cup qualifier.
A mere 21,281 turned up for the Nations’ League match against Israel on a Tuesday night last week, and a direct comparison of the last 11 games at Hampden involving Scotland shows an average just a touch under 27,000.
Which means, of course, that 40,000 more people on average over the last two years have gone to Murrayfield than to Hampden for Scotland games.
....
Apparently, it's all down to Portaloos.
I was attracted by a comment from a rugby-hating, football-covering friend of mine this week.
Scotland V Argentina at Murrayfield: The Scotland players huddle ahead of kick off.
He was deeply troubled by the 11th successive 67,200 sell-out of BT Murrayfield for last weekend’s final Autumn Test against Argentina. That’s every game for two full calendar years..
Meanwhile over at Hampden, still your other national stadium, the only sell-out for international football over the last two years was – unsurprisingly – the England World Cup qualifier.
A mere 21,281 turned up for the Nations’ League match against Israel on a Tuesday night last week, and a direct comparison of the last 11 games at Hampden involving Scotland shows an average just a touch under 27,000.
Which means, of course, that 40,000 more people on average over the last two years have gone to Murrayfield than to Hampden for Scotland games.
....
Apparently, it's all down to Portaloos.