Success without shortcuts 🩵 (1 Viewer)

SkyBlueBarmy84

Well-Known Member
In 2001, we thought it would be temporary.

That’s what happens, doesn’t it? You go down, you regroup, you come back.

We didn’t.

What followed wasn’t a dip. It was a collapse. Twenty-five years of it.

We sold everything. Players. Highfield Road. Even our share of the Ricoh. Everything that made us us.

We went into administration. We nearly didn’t exist.

And then they took our home.

Locked out of our own city. Playing “home” games in Northampton. Then Birmingham. Coventry City…not even in Coventry.

Some stopped going. Some stopped believing.

But not all of us.

We were still there.

And on the pitch?

It got worse.

Relegated to League Two. The fourth tier. Rock bottom.

From the Premier League to Forest Green in 16 years.

No parachutes. No billionaire saviour. No reset.

Just decline.

But we kept turning up.

Wembley, 2017. People say it didn’t matter. It mattered to us. It was the first time we’d felt anything in years.

Then 2018. Promotion.

Then 2020. League One champions.

During Covid. Empty stands. No fans there to see it.

Even when we won, we weren’t there.

Still without a home. Still miles away.

And then the heartbreak.

Play-off final. One kick away. Gone. Penalties.

FA Cup semi-final. 3–0 down. 3–3. Last minute…

We’d done it.

We’d actually done it.

Thirty seconds. Thirty seconds of the best feeling we’ve ever had.

Taken away.

VAR. Offside. Penalties. Another loss.

“Maybe this is the start…” someone said.

No.

This is Coventry City.

That was it.

That was the pinnacle.

But it wasn’t.

Because we kept going.

We always keep going.

And then this year, we bought our stadium.

Our home.

Ours.

After everything they took from us, we finally took something back.

And now?

We’re back.

Premier League.

Not with money. Not with shortcuts. Not because someone saved us.

Because we refused to die.

We were never meant to come back.

But we did.

Coventry City are not a fairy tale.

We haven’t won the Premier League. We haven’t shocked the world.

What we’ve done is something rarer.

We’ve come back the hard way.

In a game where clubs are bought, sold, and reshaped overnight…where identity can come second to profit… we held on to ours.

We lost everything.

But we didn’t lose who we are.

Not perfect. Not fair.

But real.

This isn’t just promotion.

It’s closure.

It’s a club finding its way back to itself.

And in modern football, that might be the most remarkable thing of all.

#PUSB 🩵
 

covcity4life

Well-Known Member
In 2001, we thought it would be temporary.

That’s what happens, doesn’t it? You go down, you regroup, you come back.

We didn’t.

What followed wasn’t a dip. It was a collapse. Twenty-five years of it.

We sold everything. Players. Highfield Road. Even our share of the Ricoh. Everything that made us us.

We went into administration. We nearly didn’t exist.

And then they took our home.

Locked out of our own city. Playing “home” games in Northampton. Then Birmingham. Coventry City…not even in Coventry.

Some stopped going. Some stopped believing.

But not all of us.

We were still there.

And on the pitch?

It got worse.

Relegated to League Two. The fourth tier. Rock bottom.

From the Premier League to Forest Green in 16 years.

No parachutes. No billionaire saviour. No reset.

Just decline.

But we kept turning up.

Wembley, 2017. People say it didn’t matter. It mattered to us. It was the first time we’d felt anything in years.

Then 2018. Promotion.

Then 2020. League One champions.

During Covid. Empty stands. No fans there to see it.

Even when we won, we weren’t there.

Still without a home. Still miles away.

And then the heartbreak.

Play-off final. One kick away. Gone. Penalties.

FA Cup semi-final. 3–0 down. 3–3. Last minute…

We’d done it.

We’d actually done it.

Thirty seconds. Thirty seconds of the best feeling we’ve ever had.

Taken away.

VAR. Offside. Penalties. Another loss.

“Maybe this is the start…” someone said.

No.

This is Coventry City.

That was it.

That was the pinnacle.

But it wasn’t.

Because we kept going.

We always keep going.

And then this year, we bought our stadium.

Our home.

Ours.

After everything they took from us, we finally took something back.

And now?

We’re back.

Premier League.

Not with money. Not with shortcuts. Not because someone saved us.

Because we refused to die.

We were never meant to come back.

But we did.

Coventry City are not a fairy tale.

We haven’t won the Premier League. We haven’t shocked the world.

What we’ve done is something rarer.

We’ve come back the hard way.

In a game where clubs are bought, sold, and reshaped overnight…where identity can come second to profit… we held on to ours.

We lost everything.

But we didn’t lose who we are.

Not perfect. Not fair.

But real.

This isn’t just promotion.

It’s closure.

It’s a club finding its way back to itself.

And in modern football, that might be the most remarkable thing of all.

#PUSB 🩵
And that right there is the post of the year
 

Perennial Lurker

Well-Known Member
In 2001, we thought it would be temporary.

That’s what happens, doesn’t it? You go down, you regroup, you come back.

We didn’t.

What followed wasn’t a dip. It was a collapse. Twenty-five years of it.

We sold everything. Players. Highfield Road. Even our share of the Ricoh. Everything that made us us.

We went into administration. We nearly didn’t exist.

And then they took our home.

Locked out of our own city. Playing “home” games in Northampton. Then Birmingham. Coventry City…not even in Coventry.

Some stopped going. Some stopped believing.

But not all of us.

We were still there.

And on the pitch?

It got worse.

Relegated to League Two. The fourth tier. Rock bottom.

From the Premier League to Forest Green in 16 years.

No parachutes. No billionaire saviour. No reset.

Just decline.

But we kept turning up.

Wembley, 2017. People say it didn’t matter. It mattered to us. It was the first time we’d felt anything in years.

Then 2018. Promotion.

Then 2020. League One champions.

During Covid. Empty stands. No fans there to see it.

Even when we won, we weren’t there.

Still without a home. Still miles away.

And then the heartbreak.

Play-off final. One kick away. Gone. Penalties.

FA Cup semi-final. 3–0 down. 3–3. Last minute…

We’d done it.

We’d actually done it.

Thirty seconds. Thirty seconds of the best feeling we’ve ever had.

Taken away.

VAR. Offside. Penalties. Another loss.

“Maybe this is the start…” someone said.

No.

This is Coventry City.

That was it.

That was the pinnacle.

But it wasn’t.

Because we kept going.

We always keep going.

And then this year, we bought our stadium.

Our home.

Ours.

After everything they took from us, we finally took something back.

And now?

We’re back.

Premier League.

Not with money. Not with shortcuts. Not because someone saved us.

Because we refused to die.

We were never meant to come back.

But we did.

Coventry City are not a fairy tale.

We haven’t won the Premier League. We haven’t shocked the world.

What we’ve done is something rarer.

We’ve come back the hard way.

In a game where clubs are bought, sold, and reshaped overnight…where identity can come second to profit… we held on to ours.

We lost everything.

But we didn’t lose who we are.

Not perfect. Not fair.

But real.

This isn’t just promotion.

It’s closure.

It’s a club finding its way back to itself.

And in modern football, that might be the most remarkable thing of all.

#PUSB 🩵
Brilliant
 

RegiswasGod

Well-Known Member
In 2001, we thought it would be temporary.

That’s what happens, doesn’t it? You go down, you regroup, you come back.

We didn’t.

What followed wasn’t a dip. It was a collapse. Twenty-five years of it.

We sold everything. Players. Highfield Road. Even our share of the Ricoh. Everything that made us us.

We went into administration. We nearly didn’t exist.

And then they took our home.

Locked out of our own city. Playing “home” games in Northampton. Then Birmingham. Coventry City…not even in Coventry.

Some stopped going. Some stopped believing.

But not all of us.

We were still there.

And on the pitch?

It got worse.

Relegated to League Two. The fourth tier. Rock bottom.

From the Premier League to Forest Green in 16 years.

No parachutes. No billionaire saviour. No reset.

Just decline.

But we kept turning up.

Wembley, 2017. People say it didn’t matter. It mattered to us. It was the first time we’d felt anything in years.

Then 2018. Promotion.

Then 2020. League One champions.

During Covid. Empty stands. No fans there to see it.

Even when we won, we weren’t there.

Still without a home. Still miles away.

And then the heartbreak.

Play-off final. One kick away. Gone. Penalties.

FA Cup semi-final. 3–0 down. 3–3. Last minute…

We’d done it.

We’d actually done it.

Thirty seconds. Thirty seconds of the best feeling we’ve ever had.

Taken away.

VAR. Offside. Penalties. Another loss.

“Maybe this is the start…” someone said.

No.

This is Coventry City.

That was it.

That was the pinnacle.

But it wasn’t.

Because we kept going.

We always keep going.

And then this year, we bought our stadium.

Our home.

Ours.

After everything they took from us, we finally took something back.

And now?

We’re back.

Premier League.

Not with money. Not with shortcuts. Not because someone saved us.

Because we refused to die.

We were never meant to come back.

But we did.

Coventry City are not a fairy tale.

We haven’t won the Premier League. We haven’t shocked the world.

What we’ve done is something rarer.

We’ve come back the hard way.

In a game where clubs are bought, sold, and reshaped overnight…where identity can come second to profit… we held on to ours.

We lost everything.

But we didn’t lose who we are.

Not perfect. Not fair.

But real.

This isn’t just promotion.

It’s closure.

It’s a club finding its way back to itself.

And in modern football, that might be the most remarkable thing of all.

#PUSB 🩵
You just made me cry, you prick 🩵
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
In 2001, we thought it would be temporary.

That’s what happens, doesn’t it? You go down, you regroup, you come back.

We didn’t.

What followed wasn’t a dip. It was a collapse. Twenty-five years of it.

We sold everything. Players. Highfield Road. Even our share of the Ricoh. Everything that made us us.

We went into administration. We nearly didn’t exist.

And then they took our home.

Locked out of our own city. Playing “home” games in Northampton. Then Birmingham. Coventry City…not even in Coventry.

Some stopped going. Some stopped believing.

But not all of us.

We were still there.

And on the pitch?

It got worse.

Relegated to League Two. The fourth tier. Rock bottom.

From the Premier League to Forest Green in 16 years.

No parachutes. No billionaire saviour. No reset.

Just decline.

But we kept turning up.

Wembley, 2017. People say it didn’t matter. It mattered to us. It was the first time we’d felt anything in years.

Then 2018. Promotion.

Then 2020. League One champions.

During Covid. Empty stands. No fans there to see it.

Even when we won, we weren’t there.

Still without a home. Still miles away.

And then the heartbreak.

Play-off final. One kick away. Gone. Penalties.

FA Cup semi-final. 3–0 down. 3–3. Last minute…

We’d done it.

We’d actually done it.

Thirty seconds. Thirty seconds of the best feeling we’ve ever had.

Taken away.

VAR. Offside. Penalties. Another loss.

“Maybe this is the start…” someone said.

No.

This is Coventry City.

That was it.

That was the pinnacle.

But it wasn’t.

Because we kept going.

We always keep going.

And then this year, we bought our stadium.

Our home.

Ours.

After everything they took from us, we finally took something back.

And now?

We’re back.

Premier League.

Not with money. Not with shortcuts. Not because someone saved us.

Because we refused to die.

We were never meant to come back.

But we did.

Coventry City are not a fairy tale.

We haven’t won the Premier League. We haven’t shocked the world.

What we’ve done is something rarer.

We’ve come back the hard way.

In a game where clubs are bought, sold, and reshaped overnight…where identity can come second to profit… we held on to ours.

We lost everything.

But we didn’t lose who we are.

Not perfect. Not fair.

But real.

This isn’t just promotion.

It’s closure.

It’s a club finding its way back to itself.

And in modern football, that might be the most remarkable thing of all.

#PUSB 🩵

Shakespeare just demoted to Warwwickshires 2nd greatest bard
 

PaulPUSB

Well-Known Member
In 2001, we thought it would be temporary.

That’s what happens, doesn’t it? You go down, you regroup, you come back.

We didn’t.

What followed wasn’t a dip. It was a collapse. Twenty-five years of it.

We sold everything. Players. Highfield Road. Even our share of the Ricoh. Everything that made us us.

We went into administration. We nearly didn’t exist.

And then they took our home.

Locked out of our own city. Playing “home” games in Northampton. Then Birmingham. Coventry City…not even in Coventry.

Some stopped going. Some stopped believing.

But not all of us.

We were still there.

And on the pitch?

It got worse.

Relegated to League Two. The fourth tier. Rock bottom.

From the Premier League to Forest Green in 16 years.

No parachutes. No billionaire saviour. No reset.

Just decline.

But we kept turning up.

Wembley, 2017. People say it didn’t matter. It mattered to us. It was the first time we’d felt anything in years.

Then 2018. Promotion.

Then 2020. League One champions.

During Covid. Empty stands. No fans there to see it.

Even when we won, we weren’t there.

Still without a home. Still miles away.

And then the heartbreak.

Play-off final. One kick away. Gone. Penalties.

FA Cup semi-final. 3–0 down. 3–3. Last minute…

We’d done it.

We’d actually done it.

Thirty seconds. Thirty seconds of the best feeling we’ve ever had.

Taken away.

VAR. Offside. Penalties. Another loss.

“Maybe this is the start…” someone said.

No.

This is Coventry City.

That was it.

That was the pinnacle.

But it wasn’t.

Because we kept going.

We always keep going.

And then this year, we bought our stadium.

Our home.

Ours.

After everything they took from us, we finally took something back.

And now?

We’re back.

Premier League.

Not with money. Not with shortcuts. Not because someone saved us.

Because we refused to die.

We were never meant to come back.

But we did.

Coventry City are not a fairy tale.

We haven’t won the Premier League. We haven’t shocked the world.

What we’ve done is something rarer.

We’ve come back the hard way.

In a game where clubs are bought, sold, and reshaped overnight…where identity can come second to profit… we held on to ours.

We lost everything.

But we didn’t lose who we are.

Not perfect. Not fair.

But real.

This isn’t just promotion.

It’s closure.

It’s a club finding its way back to itself.

And in modern football, that might be the most remarkable thing of all.

#PUSB 🩵
Youve just set me off again!! 🥹🥹

Sent from my SM-A176B using Tapatalk
 

SkyBlueSi

Member
In 2001, we thought it would be temporary.

That’s what happens, doesn’t it? You go down, you regroup, you come back.

We didn’t.

What followed wasn’t a dip. It was a collapse. Twenty-five years of it.

We sold everything. Players. Highfield Road. Even our share of the Ricoh. Everything that made us us.

We went into administration. We nearly didn’t exist.

And then they took our home.

Locked out of our own city. Playing “home” games in Northampton. Then Birmingham. Coventry City…not even in Coventry.

Some stopped going. Some stopped believing.

But not all of us.

We were still there.

And on the pitch?

It got worse.

Relegated to League Two. The fourth tier. Rock bottom.

From the Premier League to Forest Green in 16 years.

No parachutes. No billionaire saviour. No reset.

Just decline.

But we kept turning up.

Wembley, 2017. People say it didn’t matter. It mattered to us. It was the first time we’d felt anything in years.

Then 2018. Promotion.

Then 2020. League One champions.

During Covid. Empty stands. No fans there to see it.

Even when we won, we weren’t there.

Still without a home. Still miles away.

And then the heartbreak.

Play-off final. One kick away. Gone. Penalties.

FA Cup semi-final. 3–0 down. 3–3. Last minute…

We’d done it.

We’d actually done it.

Thirty seconds. Thirty seconds of the best feeling we’ve ever had.

Taken away.

VAR. Offside. Penalties. Another loss.

“Maybe this is the start…” someone said.

No.

This is Coventry City.

That was it.

That was the pinnacle.

But it wasn’t.

Because we kept going.

We always keep going.

And then this year, we bought our stadium.

Our home.

Ours.

After everything they took from us, we finally took something back.

And now?

We’re back.

Premier League.

Not with money. Not with shortcuts. Not because someone saved us.

Because we refused to die.

We were never meant to come back.

But we did.

Coventry City are not a fairy tale.

We haven’t won the Premier League. We haven’t shocked the world.

What we’ve done is something rarer.

We’ve come back the hard way.

In a game where clubs are bought, sold, and reshaped overnight…where identity can come second to profit… we held on to ours.

We lost everything.

But we didn’t lose who we are.

Not perfect. Not fair.

But real.

This isn’t just promotion.

It’s closure.

It’s a club finding its way back to itself.

And in modern football, that might be the most remarkable thing of all.

#PUSB 🩵
Get that on the changing room wall for next season
 

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