Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 21, 2019 15:35:41 GMT
Enjoy - it’s a good watch!
|
|
|
Post by pauldon on Jan 21, 2019 16:09:26 GMT
Not for me it's not as I'm also a Torquay fan! On a day when Woking drew Torquay needed a win. great crowd though. From going from 1200 fans at home they had over 4000 on boxing day and just under for new years day. 1450 at Bath is great for that league. Wish I'd gone there now than having to watch the Wycombe debacle.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 21, 2019 16:38:19 GMT
Really enjoyed that - thanks for posting @quartered, good to be reminded what passion on the pitch looks like!
Nice goal from Brunty, and loved the ball boy wearing the Roman Centurion hat.
Fights, flares and pitch invasions - that little group of Torquay fans have been watching too much Football Factory. Rather embarrassing to the vast majority of their support, I'm sure.
|
|
pirate
Forum Legend
Posts: 18,597
|
Post by pirate on Jan 21, 2019 16:45:27 GMT
Not for me it's not as I'm also a Torquay fan! On a day when Woking drew Torquay needed a win. great crowd though. From going from 1200 fans at home they had over 4000 on boxing day and just under for new years day. 1450 at Bath is great for that league. Wish I'd gone there now than having to watch the Wycombe debacle. I watched Torquay at Weston this season on a cold Tuesday night. They had over 1,000 there and sang non-stop for the full 90 minutes. Great support.
|
|
|
Post by rememberhalifax on Jan 21, 2019 18:13:37 GMT
great watch, played some nice stuff at times and thats 3 tiers below us! MMM REALLY!Brunty was a better target man than what we have now and still is!
|
|
|
Post by Antonio Fargas on Jan 21, 2019 18:24:01 GMT
Didn't realise Bath had a pig as a mascot. Not sure how that conversation went.
What we need is something cool that kids can relate to and is connected with our city. Maybe something belligerent that conveys winning and ambition, but also civilisation and culture. Our nickname is the Romans, anyone any ideas?
Erm, how about a pig?
|
|
|
Post by clockendgas on Jan 21, 2019 19:56:41 GMT
As i mentioned elsewhere i went, was a cracking afternoon, few torquay young uns getting abit worked up, a few older blokes who should know better, and a few teds visiting twerton, bath played well, great team effort, and hopefully at least a play off place this season.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 21, 2019 20:02:33 GMT
Didn't realise Bath had a pig as a mascot. Not sure how that conversation went. What we need is something cool that kids can relate to and is connected with our city. Maybe something belligerent that conveys winning and ambition, but also civilisation and culture. Our nickname is the Romans, anyone any ideas? Erm, how about a pig? Bath is famous for its Roman heritage, but you might not have heard the remarkable story surrounding its fabled foundation. Featuring a diseased prince, a herd of pigs and a mysterious hot mineral spring, Mary Stringer from Thermae Bath Spa tells the peculiar tale of Bath’s legendary beginnings... Visitors come to Bath for the Georgian architecture, the history, the entertainment, the shopping and of course the bathing. Prince Bladud, legendary father of King Lear, may well have been the first ever person to bathe in the naturally hot, mineral-rich waters but he might never have started the bathing tradition at all, had it not been for his four-legged companions. According to legend, poor Prince Bladud was wandering the countryside in 863 BC having been banished from the kingdom due to his incurable leprosy. All he had for company and a source of income was a herd of pigs who also caught his skin condition. Luckily, his fortunes were about to change, and it would be his herd of pigs he’d need to thank. Pigs will be Pigs The only thing pigs love more than rolling in mud, is rolling in nice warm mud. This is exactly what they did when, roaming through the area now known as Bath, Bladud and his pigs discovered a hot spring, which had turned the surrounding ground to mud. While Bladud probably didn’t take much notice of the mud-rolling, he certainly did notice that the steaming mud appeared to cure the pigs’ leprosy. Amazed at the apparent health-giving benefits of the hot springs, he applied the mud to his own skin and experienced the same miraculous cure! He was able to return to his kingdom, where he became the ninth king of the Britons, and later went on to found the city of Bath… …well, according to legend anyway. Officially the Romans were the founders of Bath, or as they called it, Aquae Sulis. However, Bladud is referenced in a number of historical texts, and features on several old coins, one of which has inscribed upon it, ‘Bladud Founded Bath’. See Bladud Today in Bath If you’d like to see Prince Bladud today, there are three places in Bath you can espy him. There’s an 1859 statue in Parade Gardens, an eighteenth century stone relief in the Cross Bath at Thermae Bath Spa and the oldest statue of King Bladud, which dates back to at least 1699, at the Roman Baths. You can also visit the Bladud’s Head pub in Larkhall, or wander up to the Circus where you can see John Wood’s acorn finials, thought to be a nod to Bladud, whose pigs feasted on acorns.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 21, 2019 20:04:39 GMT
Not for me it's not as I'm also a Torquay fan! On a day when Woking drew Torquay needed a win. great crowd though. From going from 1200 fans at home they had over 4000 on boxing day and just under for new years day. 1450 at Bath is great for that league. Wish I'd gone there now than having to watch the Wycombe debacle. I watched Torquay at Weston this season on a cold Tuesday night. They had over 1,000 there and sang non-stop for the full 90 minutes. Great support. left back looks decent straker
|
|
|
Post by pirate49 on Jan 21, 2019 20:26:51 GMT
As i mentioned elsewhere i went, was a cracking afternoon, few torquay young uns getting abit worked up, a few older blokes who should know better, and a few teds visiting twerton, bath played well, great team effort, and hopefully at least a play off place this season. I was undecided Friday night......obviously ended up making the wrong decision! I went the previous weekend for the game v East Thurrock. Good friendly atmosphere. Pitch is much improved and Gill has them playing some nice football. Freddie Hinds on loan from City is a real handful; and at that level Ryan Clarke and Sean Rigg stand out. If you get a chance to go there sometime I'd recommend it. It would be good for 'West Country' if both Bath and Torquay could climb back into the Conference.
|
|
|
Post by darkbluegas on Jan 21, 2019 20:39:43 GMT
Good to see the old place enjoying a good crowd and atmosphere again. Difficult to imagine where we used to find room for another 5000 odd in the ground.
|
|