MmmMonsterMunch I have to say I do agree with the general sentiment of this thread albeit it might be worded a bit harshly. This Muamba thing has just taken on a life of its own. Relentless media coverage with a SSN reporter permanently outside the hospital. Ridiculous & way OTT in my opinion.
LOL @ West Ham players wearing "Pray for Muamba" T-shirts & then thinking sh1t we better have "Pray for Abidal" on the reverse. That's odd as you didn't give a flying fcuk about Abidal in the previous game vs Leeds & his liver transplant was announced a while back!
All this look how supportive we are crap is getting on my wick frankly. I also saw some chav who'd written pray for Muamba on the back of a walkers crisps box or something just to get his face on Sky. Pathetic.
When I read the OP it did make me smile. Maybe I am going to hell now for being so damn uncaring.
I really feel the for the guy who has received such vitriol for expressing his opinion about the Great British grieving society. If you go back 20 years, the fifteen year old footballing brother of Gabby Logan died of the same condition as Muamba and terribly sad as it was, there wasn't the national outpouring of grief that we seem to relish in now. For the spawning of grief, you have to fast forward five years to 1997 and the death of a former Princess who had spent her life humping around the higher echelons of society before being killed/knocked off in a car crash. That funeral and the week of national mourning leading up to it was a catalyst for the ridicolous actions that have taken place since.I hate to say this, but I can't help think that some people and sections of the media were a bit disappointed that Muamba lived as it p1ssed on their public mourning parade.
However, the marketing men overcame the obstacle of Muamba's rapidly improving condition by cancelling the "RIP Muamba" T-shirts and quickly ordering some "Pray for Muamba" ones. "Fans" across the country did their best to replace the anticipated period of mourning with praying and sent their toddlers up to gates of Bolton Wanderer's with bunches of flowers so they could get on Sky TV. Meanwhile, across the country, fans filled the air with chants of Fabrice Muamba, Fabrice Muamba in between diities about stabbing, seriously maiming or setting fire to their local rivals.
I don't think the poster of this thread has done anything wrong, I just think he is fed up with national grieving/praying being a bizarre obsession we have got in to the habit of. If we are not careful, Match of the Day will become Mourn of the day, a contest to see which club can put on the greatest show of grief, we have already witnessed something similar when Sky TV panned around the PL training grounds on the 11th of November as the players stopped running in between cones and pretended to remember those slaughtered in the miserable wars of the 20th century. Great that they observed the minutes silence, but why show it on TV?
When Fabrice Muamba begins to come terms with a condition that will probably end his career, the majority of people will have forgotten about him as they will be too busy mourning the death of some upper class twit who sailed into some Somali pirates or someone who thought it was a good idea to put up a tent in the back garden of a polar bear.........so don't worry Kingsley, you may have missed out this weekend, but it wont be long before you can stand at the end of a line of players with your big grinning head bowed as your tail hangs down between your legs....a bizarre sight that gives me a little chuckle every time.