adam9641 wrote:So your meeting is tomoz?
And your aim is what? Sorry if I have missed it. I get the general idea you don't like the stick some players get? Which is all part of the fun and is just light hearted banter at the end of the day.
Like I explained to someone in a private conversation the other night I’m not they to be a speech Nazi. Yes I agree that some chants are fun but some are just vile like you one I debated about at the start of the thread. The idea’s that I’m promoting to hopefully prevent such vile chants in the future are -
Match day crew (right influence whilst they’re young)
The match day crew is basically a kids club on Headingley Carnegie Match days I thought up. Parents drop off kids from both teams say at like 6:30 to a kids crew rep.
Once all the kids have been collected the rep then takes the children to a room that’s spare within the grounds. Once in the room the rep puts up a session of fun, games and a sing along with the kids as well as with a meet up with Ronny and the other teams mascot. But also in the session the rep can also drill in respect for all teams that take the field.
Hopefully if this crew was to come to light long lasting friendships will be built up between these kids who in like ten/fifteen years time will hopefully be standing together in the stadiums singing much friendlier songs than the ones that we put up with today. This will be all thanks to the Match day Crew!
Leeds Met Music Department & Southstander Get Together Day
What we want is a day or night session every other month where rhino fans and songwriters within the Leeds Met Music department get together and come up with some new songs for match days with a friendly agenda. Throw a few Leeds Rhinos players into the night and it’ll be a right one.
A Media Push By Players, Journalist And Editors Of The Match Day Programme!
We need a massive push that will get to the conscience of every fan that attends match days at Headingley. Ask the Boots n All team to do a feature on one of their shows, get Peter Smith to do a column on it in the YEP, have a reminder of it in the match day programme, get players to have their say on calendar/Youtube/Podcasts along with encouraging organisations like RLFANS/Southander.com to join in with this campaign.
Last of all songs associated with rape don’t belong in a family stadium nor do songs with vile language.Such stuff in my opinion should be left on the streets and in the pubs. But if you still feel like you want to throw this stuff about in a family stadium then no hard feelings. After all this is a free country