Celery And Other Terrace Quirks That Have Stood The Test Of Time - The Set Pieces (2024)

Even those strange people who don’t live and breathe football know that Liverpudlians never walk alone and West Ham are forever blowing bubbles. They may even be aware that Baggies boing while Everton run out to the Z-Cars theme tune. Just having a vague knowledge of these peculiar and unique traits reveal that each have transcended the sport into mainstream consciousness.

Yet it doesn’t begin and end with these four anthems, of course. Pretty much every club has a chant or musical accompaniment that is solely theirs and oftenbeautifully and brilliantly bizarre. Try explaining to someone from a distant shore why a bunch of hardened East End geezers sing wistfully about bubbles fading and dying like their dreams, or the Chelsea fans’ ritual of throwing sticks of celery onto the pitch.

Some claim renowned Blues supporter Mickey Greenaway started the curious tradition in the Shed End, corrupting an old knees-up number called ‘Ask Old Brown’. Others insist the eccentric and wonderfully crude chant – ‘Celery! Celery! If she don’t cum, I’ll tickle her bum, with a lump of celery’ – derives from a pre-season friendly at Gillingham where the vegetable had sprung up overthe pitch during the summer.

All we really know is that throwing stalks from the standswas so prevalent it was banned from Stamford Bridge in 2008. Five years later the government issued a warning ahead of Chelsea’s trip to Sparta Prague: there would be no drinks, poles, flares, weapons or celery allowed inside the stadium. Thankfully the song itself persists, with a second verse involving the tickler’s mum offering sage advice on the aphrodisiac qualities of salad sticks. That’s a sentence you don’t get to write every day.

Sometimes there is a straightforward explanation for even the strangest terrace behaviour. As well as jumping up and down to sardonically to celebrate their club’s yo-yoing between the divisions, West Brom supporters also fill The Hawthorns with the religious strains of The Lord’s My Shepherd.

This started in the seventies when the Baggies played Everton in a FA Cup tie on a Sunday. With Sunday fixtures being a rare phenomenon back then some wags in the Thimblemill pub in Smethwick suggested a hymn should be sung that afternoon, and barring a lengthy dip during the hooligan years it’s been belted out ever since.

There is a long tradition of ecclesiastical ditties being appropriated for the terraces – variations on Bread Of Heaven must now total in the hundreds – but so too have chart hits proven to be a rich source of inspiration through the decades.

Lola, Seven Nation Army, Sloop John B, and Just Can’t Get Enough by Depeche Mode are just four examples of songs regularly mutated to eulogise an iconic player or denigrate a rival’s home town. These urban hymns can be heard on any given weekend from Carlisle to Crawley, but what really delight are the rare occasions when a slice of popular culture resonates with only one set of supporters. It is theirs and theirs alone.

Quite why Leicester City fans adopted Louis Armstrong’s ‘When You’re Smiling’ is, frankly, anyone’s guess, but anecdotal evidence suggests Anfield’s Kop loudly requested a rendition of it back in the Seventies and the feel-good number has been a staple in the Foxes’ songbook for generations.

Then there’s Tottenham’s long-standing and utterly incongruous association with Barry Manilow’s ‘Can’t Smile Without You’ that supposedly began when a car-full of fans listened to a compilation tape on their way to the Lane. The camp classic was the last song on the cassette, and thus it ear-wormed its way onto the Shelf.

Going further back The Dave Clark Five hit ‘Glad All Over’ became a Selhurst Park anthem almost from the moment it dislodged The Beatles from the top of the charts in 1964. So swiftly did the strong affiliation grow between the song and Crystal Palace that the band played a gig at the ground four years later despite being staunch Chelsea fans.

The catchy tune may have been ‘borrowed’ many times since by other clubs – most recently when Manchester City supporters realised the chorus scanned perfectly with ‘Guardiola’ – but make no mistake about it: the song was born, raised, and continues to flourish in south London.

If embracing a pop hit is viewed as endearingly eccentric, then we’re merely at the entrance to the rabbit-hole of weirdness. Because nothing sets one group of fans apart from their peers than a self-penned ode that celebrates not only their idiosyncratic side, but the whimsical nature of fandom in general.

Take Stoke’s thumping chant about the sale of bread: “Bread! Bread! Who will buy my bread? Long ones, short ones, some as big as my head”. As it increased in prominence during the Eighties theories began to arise regarding its genesis, with many claiming redundant miners sang it as they sold their home-baked wares around Stoke-On-Trent to make ends meet.

In actual fact the befuddled Monsieur LeClerc used to regularly sing it outside Rene’s café in the popular BBC sitcom ‘Allo ‘Allo!. But if there was previous confusion concerning its inception, there is no doubting the intention to completely perplex thosein the away end at thebet365 Stadium.

You may be similarly bemused by Swansea City’s occasional habit of whirling their arms through the air and singing ‘swim away’ on repeat. This isn’t due to a sudden outbreak of itching powder, but rather mocking their hated neighbours Cardiff following a supporter clash in 1988 that led to Cardiff’s firm being trapped on a beach and attempting to flee into the sea. It’s even been known for some Jacks to turn up to derbies adorned in armbands and snorkels, while former midfielder Jonjo Shelvey was warned by the FA after making a ‘swim away’ gesture to Cardiff fans in 2013.

If that one is more a hooligan taunt than whimsical quirk, we return to the daft end of the spectrum with Manchester City supporters’ insistence that they’re just like fans of the Invisible Man and not really here.

Although there are conflicting accounts as to the song’s origin that now rings out several times a game at the Etihad, the most feasible is an away game at Luton in the Eighties that Blues were banned from attending. A sizeable number still travelled down and when City scored pocketed celebrations broke out around the ground followed by the comically unconvincing claim that, “We are not, we’re not really here. Just like the fans of the Invisible man, we’re not really here”.

The song took on a deeper meaning at the turn of the century as City suffered the indignities of visiting lower league outposts and has become even more relevant today signifying what for most supporters are surreal experiences of playing in the Champions League and enjoying trips to the Nou Camp and Santiago Bernabeu. Additional self-deprecation – including a nod to their proud tradition of snatching farce from the jaws of glory – can also be found in the chant that City are ‘going down with a billion in the bank’.

Whether it’s Manchester United’s contingent looking forward to a monumental piss-up with Bestie in the afterlife or Liverpool’s magnificent magnum opus to Poor Scouser Tommy, every fanbase has a calling card. Some tingle the spine while others are just plain silly. Some, it has to be said, are even informative. Perhaps not if they involve celery.

Celery And Other Terrace Quirks That Have Stood The Test Of Time

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Celery And Other Terrace Quirks That Have Stood The Test Of Time - The Set Pieces (2024)

FAQs

Did All Might unlock the other quirks? ›

the only reason that Izuku is able to manifest the quirks of the other holders is because he is the 9th generation. All Might was the 8th generation, so based on the information given, no matter how hard All Might worked(injury or no injury) he would never have been able to manifest the other holders quirks.

What did All Might say to Izuku on the roof? ›

Midoriya, overwhelmed, clutches his chest, tears in his eyes, and falls to his knees as All Might finally tells him the words he had waited his entire life to hear: "Young man...you, too, can be a hero!"

Why can DEKU use past quirks? ›

The core of One For All has grown in strength from being passed from user to user, and the Quirk Factors of all of the previous users have merged into the core. The current user, Izuku Midoriya, can access the Quirks of the previous One For All users.

What quirks would All Might use? ›

One For All: All Might inherited the Quirk called "One For All." It would allow him to stockpile an enormous amount of raw power, allowing him to significantly enhance all of his physical abilities to a superhuman level.

What was DEKU's original quirk? ›

According to Deku's mother, the inherited quirk Deku should've naturally received would've either been his father's quirk, breathing fire, or her own ability to levitate small objects.

Who stole Deku's quirk? ›

Garaki sneakily stole Deku's natural Quirk factor, then it's solely his fault that the protagonist grew up an outcast, and fans can focus all their anger on one person. This paints the Midoriya family as an innocent victim of a villain who's easy to blame for all of Deku's early troubles.

What is Deku's 6 quirks? ›

Most characters in the series typically have a single Quirk, so seeing somebody with several abilities is a rare sight. As of now, Deku has access to seven Quirks, namely One For All, Transmission, Fa Jin, Danger Sense, Blackwhip, Smokescreen, and Float.

Did Deku eat All Might hair? ›

The turning point for the protagonist begins when the two characters became friends, and All Might sees the passion in him to become a superhero. He then decided to pass on a Quirk power named, One For All to Midoriya by getting the Quirkless protagonist to consume some of his DNA via eating a strand of his hair [2].

Does Deku lose his quirk forever? ›

This confirms that Deku will indeed end up quirkless by the end of the series with Kudo's plan confirming a popular fan theory that One For All would be used to overwhelm Shigaraki from within.

Can Deku use 100 percent without ERI? ›

No, manga Deku cannot go 100% without Eri. He has been training to use 100% of One For All without breaking his body, but he has not yet reached that point. He can use 45% of One For All at full power, and he can use 100% for short bursts of time with the help of his new quirk, Fa Jin.

Does Deku have a brother? ›

No, Deku is an only child so he had a sad childhood because without any siblings, he had nobody to comfort him when he found out he was quirkless because he didn't have a lot of friends and his mom didn't really get to support him as she was too worried about him and disappointed in herself, that she didn't even know ...

Is Deku's dad All For One? ›

But perhaps even more popular is the idea that the protagonist, Izuku Midoriya, is the son of the main villain, All for One. While this may seem like a stretch for some fans, especially since Deku's father is named in the series. However, there are many facts that suggest that All for One may truly be Deku's dad.

Does Bakugo have one for all? ›

In the second movie, My Hero Academia: Heroes: Rising, Deku passes the power of One for All to Bakugo, and the two save the day and defeat the villain with a double Detroit Smash. The power transfer to Bakugo turns out to be temporary, however, and the Quirk returns to Deku at the end of the film.

What was All Might's original quirk? ›

All Might's Hero Form is his original quirk: All Might was thought to be quirkless but after passing on his quirk he withheld some of the super strength and it eventually burned out yet he is still able to turn in his Hero Form.

Why didn't All Might have other quirks? ›

All Might couldn't use the 6 quirks stored inside One For All because it wasn't powerful enough at his time. When it passed down to Izuku it grew in raw power and after lot of training and going plus ultra several times, One For All's power grew so much that Izuku could access the quirks stored inside OFA.

What happened to All Might's quirk? ›

Standing tall as the greatest Hero of all time, All Might pushed beyond all his limits and ended the tyrannical rule of All For One, sending him to Tartarus in the process. In doing so, his era finally came to an end and he lost all his powers, Which meant that Deku now had to carry the Hero Society on his back.

Does Deku get all might's quirk? ›

After inheriting One For All from All Might, Deku learns that the Quirk has been passed down from generation to generation and that it began with the brother of All For One. Born a sickly and powerless individual, Yoichi nonetheless opposed All For One's tyranny.

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