His work for the homeless had no impact on our league results, which is why he was here.He came here and cost nothing. We received a fee for him. He did loads of the local homeless. Always gave his best.
I think in all honesty everyone expected us to turn the game around from one nil at that point and therefore were willing to clap him. I like that side of our fans. Plenty of other clubs give a hostile reception to any ex player, regardless of the circumstances under which they left.
That combination does seem bizarre, although I have no problem with appreciating former players.Applaud opposition, boo own players.
Park end logic.
Why has this become such an sore spot issue for certain supporters? It really sounds like the usual people just moaning for the sake of it.
The reason I have a lot of time for Naismith and not for people like Hibbert is because Naismith actually contributed to the club on and off the pitch during his time here whereas some others like the name mentioned above, as far as I'm concerned, stole a living for years without contributing anything. Naismith clearly still cares about us and it's nice that he now knows we still care for him too.
He's not a club legend or anything, far from it and no one was acting like he is. He wasn't even that good a player, he's a useful one who had his moments of absolute brilliance but more than his fair share of poo ones too. But the point is he is clearly an all-round good guy. We're a group of supporters who pride ourselves on having class and I thought giving Naismith a warm yet brief (and it was brief, anyone else who was in the ground will confirm that) applause was something that will have meant the world to him. Hopefully it sticks with him forever and he stays an Evertonian for the rest of his days because he knows, if he didn't already, what a truly special club and group of supporters we are.
People need to sod off with this "I wouldn't clap me dad if he scored past Everton" dribble, it reeks of trying to sound hip. Like a wannabe rapper saying "the ghetto is in my blood" or some garbage like that. We love our football team and are gutted to see them concede a goal but when the person scoring it is a bloke who once ran himself into the ground for us and would still be doing it now had he not been sold I think it merits a wee nod of respect, or in this case a quick clap. And then it's done, everyone on the night quickly moved back onto the game and wanting us to win. I can't believe it's being dragged up by as a controversial topic like this well after it happened.
The bottom line is to all the moaners, stop making an issue out of nothing. It was not a cup final or a derby or even an important league game. Yes I'm annoyed like everyone else it helped send us out but we'll get over it, the same way we do every year.
Pointless. And I also think a player should celebrate a goal, no matter what history he has with the club. Not like how Arteta did against us though.
You can celebrate a goal against a former team and still be respectful. A goal is a goal, if it's to an advantage - celebrate it.
Missed that. Didn't watch the game, streams were mince and Swedish telly rarely broadcasts Everton.He did celebrate it, his team mates came and congratulated him, there were smiles and back slapping and all sorts.
Missed that. Didn't watch the game, streams were mince and Swedish telly rarely broadcasts Everton.
Generally think all these gestures when a player is playing a former team is pretty ridiculous.
There was also applause for Norwich's second. I guess we now admire good goals, too.Highlights were on Sky Sports website. Pretty much confirmed imo that he scored, didn't over celebrate, the crowd clapped briefly to acknowledge that, and then everyone got on with the rest of the game.
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