Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
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26 May 2009
4 minute(s) read
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19 December 2025
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Been enjoying your Burnley-related thoughts since you started your blog.
I’m hoping another Scottish manager is celebrating at Wembley on Saturday. Then I am sure I’ll be going on about that all next week myself – big kid that I am!
Of course it’s your blog, write whatever you want. What do you care what other people think? Plenty of political news out there, mostly moaning.
I rarely see you wanting to rock ‘n roll all night and party every day. Enjoy the moment.
It’s one of the sad truths of football that whilst the joys of victory are fleeting, the pain of certain defeats stay with you forever. While it lasts though, man alive, what a high.
Congratulations.
A,
I’ve been a life-long Fulham fan and, as such, have endured more lows than I have highs. Having said that, I do remember where I was when Mo Al Fayed bought the club, and was there when we won promotion from the old 4th division right up to, finally and oddly, winning a place in Europe for next year. As others have mentioned, football brings fleeting, but memorable highs. Enjoy it. If your time in the Premier division lasts one season or ten, enjoy each and every one of them (even if you are 11 minutes from relegation as Fulham were last year). Despite all of the highs, lows, and indifferent seasons that Fulham have had in the top flight, I still look back to playing Burnley and other teams on the way there. All good stuff, and the poorer seasons merely serve to undeline the highs of the best. Enjoy 🙂
It’s you that feels guilty about being happy… We’re all happy for you!
Good for you Alastair, Enjoy the moment, breath it in & keep the memory of it! Life is far to short to do anything less. As for being a big kid, you’re a man aren’t you all at heart?
ps Prolific blogger NO, I know some who blog several times a day (Goodness only knows where they find the time & the content is not always up to much)
I second what Emilie said – it’s your blog and your right to fill it with what matters to you. I have loved reading the Burnley stuff since the blog began, so keep up the good work. No complaints from me, ever, about football talk interspersed with politics talk. You have the balance right.
27 years our little sojourn lasted in the top flight. Now it seems like a lifetime ago. I still can’t quite come to terms with life in the lower leagues. Some suggested winning more regularly in the Championship would be better than surviving in the Premiership. What a load of bollocks that was. Enjoy your time there Alistair, however long it should last. Football may not be a matter of life and death but the odd win over the Reds (mid nineties 3-1 and 6-3 come to mind) and others sure helped to get you through the week. I wonder if the same is true when smashing them in (some hope) against Yeovil and the like.
Southampton fan Dave
Am glad Burnley managed to go up – Coyle had you playing some excellent football. I just wanted to pick up on your point re the impact that the game had on the town. I’m a Wolves fan, a labour market analyst (living in London) and not really appreciated how bad the social situation was in Wolverhampton – spiralling unemployment, lack of labour demand and factories shutting down at an alarming rate – but for a few days all of this was forgotten. The Saturday we went up against QPR was magnificent and the city was buzzing with excitement. It may well be a short lived feeling, but worth it all the same. Here’s to Premiership football next year!!
If Cameron or anyone else ever takes Georgie Thompson off screen, he has had it. She is the best! Well done you. I saw you going nuts on the balcony last night. Singing lessons for the Premiership pal
It is just such a shame that Coyle avoiding the question about celtic.PLEASE COYLE DONT GO
der der der der OWEN COYLE
I’m mad about most sports, but the win over the Blades has given me one of the best highs ever.
Alastair – please keep blogging away re all things Claret. The more the better as far as I’m concerned.
re. Iraq Enquiry – how dare you have the temerity to suggest that Tony Blair wanted ‘a peaceful outcome’ to Iraq? How could this ever be possible when it was *you* and the then Prime Minister who had responsibility for feeding information re 45 minutes to the Press in the first place? As Communications Director, it was your responsibility to ensure the Press had access to the information that you/Downing St wanted them to have – so to now attempt to twist events by saying that it is the Press who attributed a greater significance to your words is spin on an Olympic level.
Ever since Labour has been in power, politicians and nit-wits like you have refused to acknowledge or to feel any shame for your words and actions. It is always everyone else’s fault.
Shame on you.