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  • It’s the final episode of the series and Sachin is very much going out with a bang given he’s joined by brilliant author, scriptwriter and podcaster John O’Farrell for a chat about Fulham. 

    John is at his engaging best as he reflects on following a club that boasts many well-known supporters. In part that is down to Fulham’s rather nice location but that’s not the case as far as John is concerned, as he explains via one of the most unique and interesting origin stories in FANS history. 

    From fighting mergers to coping with relegations, celebrating promotions and seeing an awful statue of a legendary musician built outside Craven Cottage, John has seen and done it all as a Fulham fan. And that includes being there when they pulled off a remarkable victory over Juventus en route to the 2010 Europa League final. As John explains with great warmth and wonder, it was an unforgettable occasion, as was the final itself. 

    Not surprisingly, John tells a host of amusing stories, including one about the time a Fulham player swore at his young nephew and another involving a Hollywood superstar’s less-than-impressive footballing ability. 

    John also talks about modern-day Fulham and why he fancies them to make a positive impact in the Premier League next season before going through his all-time Fulham XI and providing an answer to the final question. 

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot. 

    Cheers!

  • Hallo alle. 

    Yes, that's right, it's time for Sachin to type a greeting into Google Translate and copy and paste the German version into these episode notes as a way of introducing his chat with the award-winning author and journalist Uli Hesse about being a Borussia Dortmund fan.

    Uli is a hugely respected and revered voice on German football and from his kitchen in Berlin he speaks with great authority and passion about Dortmund, the club he was pretty much destined to support. Location played a significant role in that, as did family. Speaking of which, Uli tells a very amusing story regarding what happened when his sister took him to his first ever Dortmund game.

    That game, against Karlsruhe in January 1977, was held at the Westfalenstadion, Dortmund's home ground and one of the most spectacular stadiums in Europe. Uli speaks about how it has changed over the years and why it's such a brilliant place to watch live football, which leads to a discussion about the 'Yellow Wall', the Westfalenstadion’s stunning terrace. Uli is a long-standing season-ticket holder there so knows it well. In speaking about it he also talks about German fan culture in general and why English fans are right to be envious of it. 

    It's then onto memories of Dortmund's most notable games during Uli's time supporting the club, with few sticking in the mind quite like the 1997 Champions League final. Dortmund ripped up the script by beating Juventus in Munich and Uli was there. He shares his memories of that incredible night, which included being the designated driver for a group of oddly-underwhelmed teenagers.

    There then follows a discussion about a man Uli and Sachin adore in equal measure - Jürgen Klopp. The former speaks about his seismic impact at Dortmund before the latter does the same in regards to his time at Liverpool. Warning listeners: this part of the podcast gets very emotional. 

    Finally, there is a chat about Erling Haaland and just how impactful he could be for Manchester City before Uli talks through his all-time Dortmund XI. It contains a Scottish midfielder NOT called Paul Lambert. 

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

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  • Reading Football Club. Discuss. It’s not the easiest of tasks given their lack of notable history and success. But do not fear because the brilliant comedian Anthony Richardson is here to give the lowdown on life as a Royal.

    Anthony is best know for being one half of The Exploding Heads, the internet-based comedy act he and the equally brilliant Mark Davison launched a decade ago and which has brought us such masterpieces as Bohemian Rhapsody with Footballers and Colin from Portsmouth. Anthony chats about how both came about and how in the case of the former it led to a rather awkward exchange with Danny Baker.

    It’s then onto Reading - the club Anthony pretty much stumbled into supporting as a child and has had a curious relationship with ever since. There was his first game at Elm Park, Reading’s original ground, which he remembers most for leaving early, and the subsequent trips to their modern home, the Madejski Stadium, of which he speaks with great humour and a gripping sense of regret. The experiences have broadly not been enjoyable. The sense of belonging clearly not there.

    On a far happier note, Anthony recalls the great, history-making Reading side that achieved promotion to the Premier League in 2006; what made them so good and why they were able to do so well in the first of their two successive top-flight seasons.

    Anthony also discusses the difficult direction his relationship with Reading has taken since he became a father before going through his all-time XI and providing an answer to the final question.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • After a bit of a mid-season break FANS is back, and what a return it is as Sachin is joined by brilliant Talksport journalist Natasha Everitt for a chat about Charlton Athletic and the excellent Her Game Too campaign.

    Quite simply, Natasha was born to support Charlton, which she explains via possibly the greatest origin story in FANS history. It’s a genuine love affair and there is no doubting Natasha’s love for a club that has experienced incredible highs and lows during her 20 years or so following them.

    There were the Roland Duchâtelet years, characterised by chaos and heartbreak on and off the pitch but also the never-to-be-forgotten afternoon at Wembley in May 2019 when Charlton came from behind to beat Sunderland in the League One play-off final. Natasha talks with great vividness about what it was like to be an Addick during that time.

    Natasha also talks about the immense sense of belonging she feels watching Charlton at The Valley and, specifically, from a stand named after Alan Curbishley, a legendary figure in the club’s history who Natasha was too young to appreciate at the time but well and truly adores now, and mainly because of his surprisingly good appearances on Charlton TV.

    It’s then onto Her Game Too, a movement created last year with the intention of making football a safer and more welcoming place for female fans. Natasha is its Charlton ambassador and she explains with great clarity and conviction why and how she got involved. That involves speaking about the sexist abuse she has has suffered as a Charlton fan, in person and online. Seriously, this vile crap needs to stop.

    Natasha wraps things up by talking through her all-time Charlton XI (which provides Sachin with an excuse to bang on about Joe Gomez) and providing an answer to the final question.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • The Asian fan experience: it’s not something much is known about or which is often spoke about but, for obvious reasons, is close to Sachin’s heart, and this episode is a chance for him to give it some much-needed attention with the help of the brilliant Sanjay Bhandari.

    Sanjay is chair of English football’s anti-discrimination charity Kick It Out and a man who absolutely loves the sport he has a hand in shaping. The boy from Wolverhampton who, as he outlines, was destined to follow Manchester United and has been doing just that, home and away, for the best part of 40 years.

    It has been a joyful existence but also one of fear and loathing because of his ethnicity. Growing up Asian in Wolverhampton in the 1970s meant being subject to racism from the top of government, specifically in the form of local MP Enoch Powell. It was the time of Powell’s infamous Rivers of Blood speech, which as Sanjay explains had a profound, day-to-day impact on his life and love of football.

    Sanjay and Sachin also talk about what it means to be an Asian fan generally – why and how the immigrant experience influences who those from Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi backgrounds support and why the lack of on-pitch role models matters, not to mention what can be done about it.

    It’s then onto Sanjay’s role with Kick It Out - how he got it, why he took it and what he hopes to achieve, specifically in the fight against racism - before the conversation moves onto United. Sachin takes great delight in reflecting on the club’s current woes and credit to Sanjay for providing his own thoughts with calm, humour and intelligence.

    And he gets his own back when the chat moves onto the club’s era of dominance under Alex Ferguson, with Sanjay explaining why of all the great moments during that period, it was a night at Selhurst Park that stands out most.

    Sanjay also talks through his all-time United XI before providing a Gazza-influenced answer to the final question.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • It was inevitable Sachin would do another episode on Liverpool and here it is, and yet again he is joined by an excellent Red to talk about the Reds. First it was Kevin Sampson; now James Pearce.

    James has been a much trusted and respected voice on Liverpool for more than a decade now, first in his role as the Echo's LFC reporter and, since 2019, as The Athletic's man at Anfield. It has been, and remains, a dream existence for the boy from Bath who grew up wanting to watch Merseyside's finest as often as possible.

    That process started with a bang; a 6-1 victory over Coventry at Highfield Road in May 1990. James talks about seeing the then recently-crowned league champions in full flow and how it was the start of everything. 

    That has meant some lingering lows, most notably the regret of not being in Istanbul for Liverpool's greatest ever night. But there has also been plenty of highs, including forming a relationship with Kenny Dalglish following his return to the club in 2011. James spoke to the King on a regular basis having finally landed his dream job at the Echo and tells a brilliantly amusing story about one conversation they had over the phone.

    It's then onto the joy and privilege of following Jürgen Klopp's Liverpool - that game against Barcelona, that final in Madrid - before James reflects on how he is making an incremental and fun return to watching his boyhood club as a fan rather than a journalist. From the Kop as opposed to the press box.

    James also talks through his all-time Liverpool XI, which includes a brilliant centre-midfield partnership but one that perhaps asks a bit too much of a legendary former captain. 

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot. 

    Cheers!

  • And it’s LIVE! Yes, that’s right, it’s a rare face-to-face episode of FANS as Sachin is joined by comedian Elliot Steel at the Westow House Pub & Hotel in south London for a chat about Crystal Palace.

    Westow House makes for an excellent setting for what proves to be an excellent chat about the Eagles - a club located not far from where Sachin and Elliot are meeting and who Elliot supports in large part because his dad does. His dad, in case you don't know, is the fellow, and brilliant, comedian Mark Steel and this episode opens with Sachin outlining his rather difficult and amusing relationship with Steel Snr.

    There’s loads of chat regarding Elliot’s love/hate relationship with Palace, from the joy and pride he takes in watching them at Selhurst Park to his frustration with some of the players and games he has seen in his 20 or so years following the club. One man Elliot absolutely adores from that time is Iain Dowie and there is a lovely story regarding where and when he met the former Palace manager.

    Elliot also delves into a variety of other topics, including which comedian is the best footballer, the real reason Jürgen Klopp is a great manager and why he cannot stand Arsenal fans. The latter makes for a sensational rant.

    Elliot also talks through his all-time Palace XI and provides an interesting and typically funny answer to the final question.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot. 

    Also, if you’re looking for a place to eat and drink in south London do check out Westow House. It really is a brilliant boozer. Full details here: https://westowhouse.co.uk/contact/

    Cheers!

  • It’s back! Yes, that’s right, the start of a new series of FANS is here, and what a start it is as Sachin is joined by the brilliant BBC commentator Steve Wilson for a chat about Tranmere Rovers.

    Steve is in typically articulate and engaging form as he discusses the club he was born to support having grown up in the shadow of Prenton Park – Tranmere’s ground and, as Steve makes clear, one that is NOT in Liverpool.

    His first trip there was in January 1975 and there are memories of the sights, sounds and smells of the occasion – a Third Division game against Grimsby that, as was typical of following Tranmere at the time, took place on a Friday night. Steve was hooked and about to embark on a journey of extreme highs and lows.

    There have been financial difficulties and multiple relegations to contend with as a ‘Trannie’ fan during the past 40 years or so but also the glorious, never-to-be-forgotten reigns of Johnny King and John Aldridge. Steve speaks with great warmth about the success both men brought to Tranmere as well as with great humour about his personal interactions with each of them. His story about interviewing Aldridge for Football Focus is especially wonderful.

    Speaking of ‘the Aldridge Years’, Steve also reflects on the three iconic matches Tranmere played under their former player-manager in the early noughties, and in particular the 4-3 victory over Southampton in February 2001. Steve was at Prenton Park that night commentating for BBC Five Live and speaks with fascinating insight and honesty about the experience.

    Finally, there is a chat about modern-day Tranmere and how the club appears to be in good hands thanks to the presence of two former players in Mark Palios and Micky Mellon. And speaking of former players, Steve also talks through his all-time Tranmere XI, which includes a place for one of his BBC colleagues. And no, it’s not Dan Walker.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • It’s the final episode of the series and Sachin is well and truly going out with a bang given he’s joined for a chat about Brentford by the brilliant broadcaster and podcaster, Natalie Sawyer.

    Natalie is as engaging as she is eloquent and those traits are fully on show as she talks about the club she’s adored ever since a childhood trip to Brentford’s old ground, Griffin Park, in 1987. There’s a lovely story about what happened beforehand involving her brother and a group of Bristol Rovers supporters before Natalie goes on to speak about how it was the Griffin Park floodlights as much as the action on the pitch that drew her into a life following the Bees.

    It’s not been an easy life given Brentford’s lack of success and financial troubles over the past 30 years or so but Natalie has loved the ride, one which peaked at Wembley this May as Thomas Frank’s men beat Swansea in the Championship play-off final. Natalie was there and talks about her emotions on the day and why promotion to the Premier League meant so much not only to her and her brother but also their dad, west London’s very own Crocodile Dundee.

    This naturally leads to a discussion about modern-day Brentford and the huge role played in the club’s rise by owner Matthew Benham. Natalie is full of praise for her fellow fan and tells a story about meeting him that sums up the banker-turned-professional gambler’s notoriously enigmatic nature.

    Natalie also chats about meeting her all-time Brentford hero, Dean Holdsworth, as well as about appearing on a bus as part of a club campaign to sell matchday tickets.

    In FANS tradition, Natalie wraps things up by going through her all-time Brentford XI and providing an answer to the final question, both of which lead to Sachin worrying about her home life.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • Trophies, what are they good for? Absolutely nothing. Well, not quite, but they’re certainly not the be-all and end-all of being a Tottenham fan as far as Leon Mann is concerned.

    Leon is a broadcaster, film maker, campaigner and, as Sachin knows from personal experience, a truly lovely person, and he speaks with typical intelligence and warmth about his 30-plus years supporting Spurs. It’s not been easy given the club’s relative lack of success but, overall, Leon has loved following the club, and especially because of the players he’s seen.

    Waddle. Lineker. Gascoigne. Klinsmann. Bale. Just some of the superstar footballers who have brought Leon joy from childhood to adulthood and in their own ways made up for a dearth of silverware. He speaks about them all, with one man picked out for particular special mention – Gazza. Leon was there when he scored THAT free-kick against Arsenal at Wembley as well as for when he suffered THAT injury against Nottingham Forest and reflects on how those moments sum up a flawed genius. Leon also reflects on the time Gazza nearly ran him over.

    There’s also a chat about the poignant circumstances surrounding Leon’s first trip to White Hart Lane, as well as about the pros and cons of Daniel Levy’s 20-year chairmanship of Spurs. And before all of that, Leon discusses his long-standing efforts to improve ethnic diversity in UK sports media, for which he was rightly awarded an MBE earlier this year.

    Leon also talks through his all-time Tottenham XI, which contains a truly controversial selection, and gives an answer to the final question that Sachin simply can’t accept. 

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • Reply. Retweet. Like. Mute. Block. Yes, that’s right, it’s time to talk Twitter. 

    It’s the social media platform most people cannot stand but are also addicted to, with Sachin very much in that camp. He loves/hates Twitter and is joined by two cracking guests to discuss this most twisted of online relationships  - podcaster Laura Kirk and deputy editor of Arseblog News, Andrew Allen.

    Laura and Andrew speak with great wit and honesty about how they interact with Twitter and why, like Sachin, they tend to keep it light when it comes to football chat on there. Jokes rather than tactics. Memes rather than metrics. 

    Being Gooners, Laura and Andrew also talk about what it’s like to be part of ‘Arsenal Twitter’, a group of people who do a great line in gallows humour, which, as they explain, is largely a coping mechanism during this turbulent time for their club. 

    There’s also an interesting discussion about the merits of teaching social media-use in schools before the conversation returns to Arsenal, including why Laura and Andrew support the club in the first place. Laura’s answer is especially marvellous. 

    The guests also talk about AFTV and Mikel Arteta before going through their all-time Arsenal XIs and providing different but equally interesting answers to the final question. Oh, and there’s also a bit about the Spice Girls. 

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • Middlesbrough may not feel like a club that has a rich and interesting history but it absolutely does, and few people have a better grasp of that than the Football Association’s former director of communications, Adrian Bevington.

    After a quick chat about Sven-Göran Eriksson (naturally), Adrian speaks with clarity and passion about what it’s been like to support Middlesbrough, his hometown club, for over 45 years, a period of great highs, great lows and pretty much everything in between, including the joy of watching Juninho week in, week out.

    The 1980s were very important for Adrian given it was when he watched an exciting and successful Middlesbrough side home and away, but it was also a time when the club nearly went out of existence. Adrian does an excellent job of putting that into context, as well as speaking about the trauma that came with being a match-going supporter during the height of hooliganism.

    It’s then onto the 1990s and, specifically, the Bryan Robson Years. Adrian well and truly lived this period given he was working for Middlesbrough when Juninho arrived and spread his magic across the newly-build Riverside Stadium, as well as when Fabrizio Ravanelli and Emerson joined. He provides insight into all three superstar signings, and speaks with understandable regret about the 1996-97 season, one in which Boro played free-flowing football but which will ultimately be remembered for them losing two finals and getting relegated.

    From Adrian also comes a wonderful tribute to Steve Gibson, the fellow boyhood Middlesbrough fan who having helped save the club in the 80s has provided the platform for everything that has come since in his role as owner and chairman, including the team’s historic League Cup success and run to the Uefa Cup final in the early 2000s. For Adrian there is no doubt - Gibson is a truly unique figure in the history of English football.

    Adrian also talks through his all-time Middlesbrough XI before providing an Emile Heskey-related answer to the final question. 

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • This episode is brought to you by Sergio Georgini. Yes, that’s right, it’s time to talk about the Swindon (Town) lot.

    Sachin is joined by sports writer and funny man on Twitter, Declan Taylor, for a discussion about a club that is in perpetual crisis. Or at least that’s been the case for the 25 years or so Declan has supported Swindon and he does a brilliant job of articulating the mental and emotional torture that comes with being a Robin.

    Regular financial trouble, regular relegations, regular Wembley heartache … Declan has seen and experienced it all. He’s also had happy times, mainly during his years as a regular at The County Ground, which he reflects on with great warmth and humour, which is also the case when he discusses Paolo Di Canio’s brief reign as manager.

    There’s also a chat about Swindon’s one and only season in the Premier League and, prior to that, Declan reveals how a leisure centre in his hometown was responsible for the name of the greatest band in British music history. Sachin’s mind is suitably blown.

    Finally, Declan talks through his all-time Swindon XI before giving the most precise answer to the final question in FANS history.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • Stick on your best pair of jeans, have a bevvie and get your rocks off to this banger of an episode as Sachin is joined by Reverend and the Makers frontman, Jon McClure, for a chat about Sheffield Wednesday.

    What a band Reverend and the Makers are and what a musician Jon is – a high-energy performer who has written some of the best British tunes of the past 20 years, including Heavyweight Champion of the World, Open Your Window and Sex with the Ex. He’s got it all and gives it his all as he discusses his beloved Wednesday.

    It started for Jon at the start of what was a glorious time for the club – the 1990s. Those trips to Wembley when Wednesday beat Manchester United to win the 1991 Rumbelows Cup and then, two years later, beat Sheffield United to secure a place in the FA Cup final; Jon remembers them well and, in the case of the latter, how it involved him heading south with a couple of random chaperones.

    He wouldn’t have changed that experience for the world, nor the joy of watching Chris Waddle play for Wednesday, a player of incredible skill and imagination who has gone onto become a close friend. Jon’s love for Waddle is as sweet as it is captivating.

    On a sombre note, Jon also talks about Hillsborough and what took place there in April 1989. There is no hiding the sadness and regret Jon feels about one of the darkest chapters in British football history and how it continues to haunt the ground to this day.

    There’s also a discussion about Paolo Di Canio and THAT push, as well as about the importance of Wednesday to Jon’s relationship with his brother, Chris. Before all of that there’s also a funny story involving a Carlos Tevez billboard.

    Finally, Jon talks though his all-time Sheffield Wednesday XI before ending the episode with a brutal takedown of Danny Wilson.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • It's a case of friends reunited as Sachin is joined by his pal – and brilliant podcaster – Ash Rose for a chat about Queens Park Rangers. 

    Ash is host of the 'original' 90s football podcast, Alive and Kicking, and, as such, it's no surprise this episode opens with a discussion about the decade when football was at its best. Well, that's certainly what Sachin and Ash reckon and neither are shy in explaining why. Great characters, great players ... Euro 96; the lads reminisce about it all.

    It's then onto QPR, the club Ash supports because his dad does and which has brought him big highs, big lows and big dramas, and he does a typically great job of talking through it all, starting off with the team of the early 90s (yes, even more 90s chat) that finished fifth in the first ever Premier League season. What made them so good? How good was it watching them play? And just how good was Les Ferdinand, or 'Sir Les' as he continues to be known among QPR fans? Ash has the answers. 

    Staying in the 90s, Ash also talks about being at Loftus Road to witness THAT goal by Trevor Sinclair before the conversation moves onto arguably the most tumultuous time in QPR's history – the Flavio Briatore-Bernie Ecclestone era, four years of constantly changing managers and off-pitch controversies that was perfectly captured in The Four Year Plan, the jaw-dropping documentary by Mat Hodgson. Ash lived every second of this period and has plenty to say about it. 

    Finally, Ash talks through his all-time QPR XI before going back in time to change one moment from his Rangers-supporting past. And, yes, it relates to the 1990s.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot. 

    Cheers!

  • It’s back!

    Yes, that’s right, the start of a new series of FANS is here, and what a start it is as Sachin is joined by BBC journalist Neil Henderson to talk all things Manchester City.

    Neil is best known for being part of a team of BBC journalists who tweet the front and back pages of the national newspapers every evening and, perhaps not surprisingly, Sachin is keen to know how this came about. Neil does an excellent job of explaining before going on to speak with passion about why he feels providing this free and voluntary service is important. 

    It’s then onto Manchester City, the club Neil supports because, quite simply, it was his destiny to do so. And that's meant going on one hell of a ride, from the lowest of lows to the highest of Sergio Aguero-highs. Neil speaks about this with great wit and warmth, not to mention being open and honest about why he turned his back on watching City in the flesh for the best part of 20 years.

    He got back into the swing of things in the 1990s and what a truly wild decade that was for City – six managers, two relegations, one incredible play-off final and one incredible player in the shape of Georgi Kinkladze. Neil has plenty to say on all of this, including providing fascinating insight into the sense of defiance that swept through City fans as everything around them was going wrong.

    It’s then onto modern City and what proves to be a spiky section of the pod as Sachin lays out his grievances in regards to how the club’s fans have responded to a period of great wealth and great success and Neil comes back at him with the force of a Vincent Kompany header. OK, so it’s not as strong as that, but it’s still punchy and purposeful, as well as touching as Neil explains why City’s most recent Premier League title win meant so much to him.

    Neil then talks through his all-time City XI, which is actually an all-time City XIV, before providing a lovely answer to the final question.

    So download, listen and love And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • It's the final episode of the series and Sachin is well and truly going out with a bang given he is joined by two brilliant podcasters to talk US football fandom; host of the Arsenal Vision podcast, Elliot Smith, and contributor - and host - of the Blue Room podcast, Rob Vera.

    Elliot and Rob are in typically fascinating, forthright and funny form as they discuss what it's like to be a fans of English football from the other side of the Atlantic. The discussion starts in regards to the European Super League and the idea that most Americans backed the breakaway because of its likeness to the NFL - as Elliot and Rob make clear, that was certainly not the case for them, and mainly because they love football because it's different to American sports.

    The chat then moves onto why Elliot and Rob support the teams they do (which in Rob's case involves a remarkable twist of fate) and how they go about following them from so far away. What are the best and worst kick-off times? And does watching Arsenal and Everton ever involve drinking beer at an absurd time in the morning?

    This leads to an interesting and important debate about the demographics of US football fandom before Elliot and Rob wrap things up by stepping back in time in order to change one moment from their time supporting their respective clubs up to now. Elliot's is pretty obvious; Rob's much less so.

    So - for the final time this series - download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • It’s a very different and very important episode of FANS as Sachin is joined by Football Supporters’ Association caseworker Amanda Jacks for a discussion about the treatment of match-going fans by police and stewards.

    This is a subject Sachin has wanted to cover for a while and he does so with the absolutely ideal person given this has been Amanda’s area of expertise, and passion, for more than a decade. And following a quick chat about hair (yes, you read right) she provides clear and forthright insight into the sometimes difficult relationship that exists between people who watch live football in the UK and the figures of authority they come across as part of that experience.

    What are the laws that only affect football fans? Why do they exist and what are the draconian ways in which they are used? Amanda talks about all of this as well as discussing the broader, long-term impact of criminalising supporters.

    Amanda and Sachin also discuss the laws around drinking alcohol at games and how they are not only severe but ridiculous and highlight the way football fans are treated differently to those of other sports.

    There’s also chat about a Parliamentary Bill that could make it illegal for football fans to be annoying in public before Amanda signs off with a plea for match-goers to make contact with her with any complaints and queries they may have, which can be done so via the following routes:

    Email: [email protected]

    Phone: 07703519555

    Twitter: @FairCop_

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers.

  • What’s it like to support a club that has experienced the highs of league titles and European glory as well as the lows of relegation and 9-0 tonkings by Manchester United? To find out you’d need to ask an Ipswich Town fan, and there are few more engaging and entertaining than comedian and writer, Tony Cowards.

    Tony’s love for Ipswich was sparked in the 1970s and he’s pretty much seen it all since then, most notably the great team under Bobby Robson that clinched the Uefa Cup in 1981 and came close to being crowned champions and FA Cup winners in the same season. Tony speaks with great warmth about that era, including telling the amusing story of the first time he saw Ipswich play in the flesh.

    There’s also an amusing story about being in the away end at Old Trafford for the 9-0, as well as one in regards to the 2000 play-off final at Wembley, which neatly leads onto recollections of the side that finished fifth in the Premier League under George Burley. Just what made them so good? And what the hell was going on with Marcus Stewart that season?! Tony tries his best to come up with answers and explanations.

    There’s also chat about the extremely mixed campaign that followed before Tony talks through his all-time Ipswich XI and goes back in time in order to fulfil his fantasy of seeing Gabriel Batistuta play at Portman Road.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot.

    Cheers!

  • It's the episode Sachin has been dreading but knew he'd eventually have to do - yes, that's right, it's time for a full-on chat about Manchester United. Fortunately for this podcast's Liverpool-supporting host, he is joined by a wonderful guest to do just that - TalkSport presenter Andy Goldstein.

    Andy is at his warm and funny best as he reflects on following the club that's won the lot and then some, a love affair that started for him in the early 1980s when United weren't actually that good but still did enough to captivate this particular lad from London. Two huge figures in United's history played a role in that - the late, great Sir Matt Busby and Bryan Robson. Andy talks about meeting both men and what it's like to be able to continue spending time with the latter in his capacity as a presenter for MUTV. His take on this is rather sweet – and hilarious. 

    It's then onto the 1990s and what was a truly golden era for all United fans. Great moments, great players, a great manager and an absurd number of trophies, with the peak undeniably being THAT treble in 1999. Andy can remember exactly where he was and what he felt when Ole Gunnar Solskjær sealed it at the Nou Camp and, not surprisingly, is happy to talk about it at length.

    He also shares a host of great stories, including the frankly astonishing tale of how he turned down a lift from Sir Alex Ferguson, as well as going through his all-time United XI and giving a truly excellent answer to the final question.

    So download, listen and love. And after you have, please Rate and Review. It would mean a lot. 

    Cheers!