Saturday, 29 August 2015

Hello, Later!

I realise that after four years of gathering dust, this blog's readership has likely dropped from laughable to actually zero, but I'm nothing if not persistent.

Expect more in September; you might actually get it this time.

Monday, 14 November 2011

Later, Something Will Happen

Don't worry everyone, the Cyan One lives. I could make a load of fuss about the new house, new girlfriend, etc etc getting in the way.

This would be designated: A lie.

Worry not, though, faithful reader (all three of you), I will return with more interesting fare.

Probably.

Sunday, 30 January 2011

Citius, Altius, Jeebus

As those on Nationstates who read this blog (so, all five of you) will probably know, my nation (Krytenia) will be hosting the Sixth NS Winter Olympics.

This is, apparently, a good thing. Though right now, I forget why. Just populating the signup lists has damn near broken my brain.

On the plus side, having the "Ski Sunday" theme stuck in your head is no bad thing.

Wednesday, 29 December 2010

An Early Birthday Present

Here we are, less than an hour into December 29, and the England cricket team have retained the Ashes.

Remind me to send a thank-you letter to Andrew Strauss.

Thursday, 9 December 2010

Art Imitating Life

Well, congratulations to Russia, I suppose. Not their fault.

Fact is, though, the bid process shows just how much of an old boys club FIFA is, voting for the same thing, over and over, not letting those who would better the game take on the challenge...

...they sound like the WCC in the old days.

Someone get Sarzonia Sepp Blatter's number.

Thursday, 2 December 2010

You Have Been Warned

Shortly after 3pm GMT, I will be posting either some jingoistic tubthumping, or a scathing attack on Sepp Blatter and Jack Warner.

Yes, it's 2018 FIFA World Cup decision day, and it's basically England v Russia.

London v Moscow.
Manchester v St Petersburg.
er...Milton Keynes v Sochi.

Bring it on.

Monday, 29 November 2010

Short of Line, Length, Sleep

It's 5:07 on a Monday morning, and here I am engrossed in a game of cricket.

Cricket.

It's amazing what the prospect of hammering the Aussies at <insert sport here> on their own turf will do to your sleeping patterns.

Wake me up when it's Adelaide, K?

Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Milton Keynes' Tartan Army

Milton Keynes at last has a motoring claim to fame that doesn't involve roundabouts.

OK, one roundabout, but as it's in Monaco, we'll let them off on that one.

Yes, Red Bull Racing, Formula One constructor's champions, are based in the south of my fair city, in a large factory (with obligatory "NOTICE US" scarlet bovine paint job). And yet they decide to be registered to Austria, meaning it's not God Save The Queen, but Land Der Berge that play's after the driver's national anthem - a Teutonic double-whammy if Vettel wins.

And yet...it gets me hankering for old days.

You see, it never used to be so damned corporate. Back in 1997, Paul Stewart and his father John (or "Jackie", as everyone insists on calling him. It's a Scottish thing) entered the world of Formula One. They got Ford as a works engine supplier, HSBC as a title sponsor - hell, they even got Rubens Barrichello as lead driver. The car, with its clean white lines and understated tartan motif looked the part, and was on a par with the Benettons in terms of speed.

It had just one tiny problem: it was as fragile as a porcelain kitten.

Chances are, when you saw a Stewart overtaking someone, you'd see it belching smoke and flames within five laps.

And yet, we cheered on Jackie's boys, willing them to do well, buoyed by a single podium in Monte Carlo in 1997. Even the realisation Jan Magnussen drives like your nan, that Jos Verstappen drives like the walking ATM that he is, that there is seemingly no limit to the ways that tiny screws and rubber O-rings can really screw up a V10 engine, we held hope.

And then, one wet day in Autumn 1999, Johnny Herbert went and won us a Grand Prix.

About two weeks after Jackie Stewart sold the team to Ford.

In the words of James May: "Oh, cock."

Sunday, 21 November 2010

Down The Tube

Well, that was depressing. Once again, my beloved Arsenal have shown they are most spectacularly capable of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

And against Spurs, no less. Herbert Chapman would have had kittens.

It seems that Arsenal's time at the Emirates has been a curse (if you live in North London, and know of a former worker at the Ashburton Grove industrial park with a Tottenham shirt and working knowledge of voodoo, please let me know). Time was, at Highbury, you'd get off the tube at Finsbury Park station - despite the fact that Arsenal tube station was opposite the North Bank - and join 30,000 others descending upon Gillespie Road or Avenell Road, bringing the whole of N5 into a red and white standstill.

Nowadays, of course, where you get off the tube depends largely on where you're sitting, thanks to the fact that Arsenal have built the new ground smack dab at the halfway point between Arsenal and Holloway Road stations. They even had the foresight to build it right next to Drayton Park (which, according to the 1970's era London Game, I long to discover) - and, of course, Drayton Park is now closed on matchdays.

If it wasn't so damned stupid, it'd be hilarious. Much like Fabianski's goalkeeping...speaking of which, I have a suggestion for Ol' Flappy-Hands. Take the Picadilly Line. Keep going until you reach Heathrow. Get plane. Don't come back.

Oh well, there's always next week...

Friday, 22 October 2010

Seventy-Eight And Counting




As of tomorrow, I will have been a member of the online game Nationstates for six years and six months.

And you thought TV Tropes was a timesink.

One thing, and one thing only, has kept me on that site for this long; the realisation that there are many people around the world who daydream and fantasise about being a great sportsman, or manager, or commentator, but have not the ability to do so.

What does this have to do with the game though, I hear you ask?

Simple really - those who can, do; those who can't, roleplay.

Over the last seventy-eight months, I've created world-class goalkeepers, and midfielders with ADHD; made a reporter feared around the world...and killed twelve people in a coach crash.

And I still haven't won the damned World Cup. Not that I'm bitter...

As the old adage goes, though, there's always next time, and "next time" started yesterday, with the beginning of the fifty-third edition of Nationstates' most popular "game within a game". And here I sit, ten to one in the morning, eagerly anticipating made-up results for a made-up nation in the way most eagerly watch the Soccer Saturday vidiprinter for news of how Arsenal, or Aberdeen, or Accrington Stanley are doing.

I should be ashamed of this, but I'm not; I wear my colours with pride, and those colours are Krytenian sky blue.