On a Sunday the roads was quite, and town centres was shut, Corner shop shut for a few hours and my bus fare as a child was 5p Please add
My bus fare as a child was 2p. That was anywhere in South Yorkshire. So Kex to tarn, tarn to Sheff, Sheff to tarn, tarn to Kex - 8p. This isn't the dim and distant past, it's the 80s, which to me seems like yesterday.
In fact roads used to be so quite we could play kerby, and hardly have to stop, once the couple of times you hear "CAR" shouted as a warning
Watching the local football on Yorkshire Television (it always seemed to be Leeds United if they were at home), just after Sunday dinner, and the commentator was Keith Macklin. When on the odd occasion the cameras turned up at Oakwell, we always seemed to lose no matter how well we'd been playing beforehand.
Sunday dinner was a must in most homes, not sure many family do this anymore, No matter where I was playing I had to be back for 1200 for dinner
When yer got money for returning your pop bottles. When everything went on the fire back and converted to energy. When the bedroom window was frozen over on the inside in the winter. When you take your ball onto the oakwell pitch at half time and have a kick about.
Going to the toilet meant leaving the house. The streets and parks were full of kids playing. Playing football on a Sunday and having to rush to the pub for afternoon last orders.
Having to walk home on a Friday and Saterday night coz you missed the last bus and couldn't afford a taxi
Standing on the Kop for the first half before walking round the side of the pitch to the Ponty for the second with the smell of tobacco from the Brewery wafting across the pitch.
I use to have me older brothers trousers but he was over 6 foot tall,so I had to unzip the fly to blow me nose
Snickers were called Marathons. Sticking to the Gingleboy carpet. Oldfields Pie and Pea stall in't Market(Bewdiful) RADIO 1 WAS FECKIN BRILLIANT!...No younger ones, I'm not kidding, IT WAS!