{"id":1931,"date":"2021-03-22T13:20:54","date_gmt":"2021-03-22T13:20:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.andcouldheplay.com\/?p=1931"},"modified":"2021-03-22T13:20:54","modified_gmt":"2021-03-22T13:20:54","slug":"is-2020-2021-the-season-we-all-abandon-superstitions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.andcouldheplay.com\/is-2020-2021-the-season-we-all-abandon-superstitions\/","title":{"rendered":"Is 2020-2021 The Season We All Abandon Superstitions?"},"content":{"rendered":"

The vast majority of football fans that I know have their own superstitions when it comes to the match. Some will not wear certain clothes if they have the club crest on or are made up of club colours. Others will only<\/em> wear specific clothes, believing that their underpants or socks have some sort of mystical power that helps to control the outcome of the game. From saying \u2018touch wood\u2019 when discussing a player\u2019s good injury record through to drinking out of a specific mug, football fans are as prone to following some form of superstition as anyone. The evidence of Liverpool going thirty years without a league title should be enough to make people reconsider these daft suspicions, but still supporters persisted with them, basing their conclusions on the fact that we once came back from behind to win a match because they changed top at half-time, or some other daft thing.<\/p>\n

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I am never buying a Liverpool t-shirt before the league starts ever again. It\u2019s my bad luck superstition<\/p>\n

\u2014 A (@Aadil1908) February 20, 2021<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n