I was having a chat with a mate of mine and we both drew a blank on this one. Has any one ever heard or known any one who has gone from being a Hibs supporter to the Yams or vice versa. I am talking about real fans that go matches and supprt their club by buying merchandise and getting involved, rather than people that just say... I support so and so.
I have never heard of this (well nobody over the age of 16) doing this. But I'd be keen to hear some stories about anyone who has.
Has anyone on here come from the darkside?
GGTTH
Results 1 to 30 of 38
Thread: Going to the Dark Side!
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27-05-2011 02:20 AM #1
Going to the Dark Side!
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27-05-2011 06:15 AM #2
Yes, I know someone from Penicuik who used to go to Easter road all the time and was a hibee, but then he ended turning onto a yam and follows them everywhere.
Think it was to copy whoever he was mates with at the time.
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27-05-2011 06:59 AM #3
There is a book about a Hibs fan who followed Hearts for a year, not sure if its any good,
Heartfelt
Supping Bovril From The Devil's Cup
Aidan Smith
ISBN: 1841584223
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27-05-2011 07:19 AM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
How in the name o' **** could anyone who supports Hibs and then sticks on a smelly pink scarf and goes shouting for the Yams
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27-05-2011 07:22 AM #5
I do recall one lad from school was a Hibs Kid (if it was called that back then), but then switched sides mid-season in, oooh, must have been......1986 (that would make us 13)
He still took the free tickets to the games, and I might be wrong in the fact that it was a "hibs kid" game against Dundee Utd on the last day of that season and he was sat in the row in front of us, telling us how funny it was that he would be in the main stand at Easter Road on the day Hearts won the league.
Oh how we laughed
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27-05-2011 07:22 AM #6This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
That's actually a pretty decent read
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27-05-2011 07:39 AM #7
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I can only think of one who switched sides but at least she did it the right way round. As a youngster in the 60's she was an avid Yam (although we hadn't conjured up the term back then) - never missed a home game and travelled a fair bit with them too.
Then romance came into her life - she met and married a fervent Hibee, and converted to the good guys. She became as passionate about the Hibs as she had been in her days following the dark side.
I lost touch wi' her a long time ago and I heard that the happy couple split up years ago. Hope she's not given up the cause.
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27-05-2011 07:54 AM #8
One of my best mates was a season ticket holder at Tynecastle until he was about 15 then me and a couple of mates dragged him to ER a few times and gradually one him round. He goes to more Hibs games than me now and absolutley loathes that mob with a passion.
When i was about 6 or 7 i asked to go to a Hearts game with my cousin just to see what it was like so i went and wore the scarf the lot. Even at that age it just felt wrong. I can safely say my bi-curious stage is well behind me.
Don't know any Hibs fans who have become yams, one question - why?
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27-05-2011 08:00 AM #9
I bad Hun leanings as a small kid before I actually went to game. Does this count?
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27-05-2011 08:16 AM #10
my dad used to be a bun when he was like 12!
now he is one of the biggest hibs fans i know ! every home and away (barr one or two a season) sponsors two players etc.. its just weird though..
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27-05-2011 08:30 AM #11
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I knew of a guy who used to be a Hibby but when we were going through a bad patch, decided he wanted to support a new team. His mum suggested that he should support Celtic instead because they also play in green. Sufficed to say, he's a lesser green now.
I have heard of people in days gone by who used to support Hearts and Hibs and would alternate between the two depending on home games.
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27-05-2011 08:42 AM #12
My wee brother Russell. I've got 2 brothers and we were brought up in a Hibby household, dad took us all along to Easter Road all the time, we were all there at the Skol cup final celebrating....5 years or so later and Russell decides he's a Yam.
My mum and dad are now divorced, coincedence? It might have nothing to do with it, or it could be the only reason there was ever any tension in the Easton household was that one ridiculous decision by my strange brother.
Moral of this story to tell all your kids/friends/relatives - if you change from a Hibby to a Yam your mummy and daddy will get a divorce.
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27-05-2011 08:50 AM #13
I came up from down south when I was about 7 or 8, (though was born in Scotland!) and most of the kids at my primary school followed the jambos, so I followed them (with my Margate accent and knitted jumpers - cheers maw - thought it best to fit in). Neighbour of mine was a die hard Hibee, and his folks took me down to Easter road in the summer for an open day/meet the players type deal. I was a goalie and got to meet and get tips from Andy Gorum and Alan Rough, been a Hibee since. Was a magic day, and won't happen again in this age of "professionialism" as players just not interested.
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27-05-2011 08:58 AM #14This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-05-2011 09:47 AM #15This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-05-2011 11:01 AM #16
My brother used to be a Hibs fan. He'd never been to a game, but did have a few strips when he was younger. About age 12, he decided he was going to be a yam, simply because my dad was and he asked him to take him to a fee games. He now holds a season ticket at the PBS.
Also have a mate that switched from Hibs to the yams and back again! He was only 13 when he made his decision to stop switching and stuck with the cabbage.
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27-05-2011 01:20 PM #17
I am a Hibs fan but also watch Hearts when Hibs are not at home I take some stick for from the hrats fans when things are going wrong for them but its all good fun it but i get to watch a lot of foottie
let the abuse begin
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27-05-2011 01:25 PM #18This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I lost one to the dark side, I wisnae losing another...
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27-05-2011 01:32 PM #19
My eldest son was brought up a Hibee but flitted temporarily to the dark side thanks to my ex. The flitting didn't stop there and has supported more teams that I care to remember but has settled on the Arabs as he lives in Dundee.
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27-05-2011 02:09 PM #20
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Never heard of this, I do have some good news to bring to this board though! I've managed to turn a tic fan and a hun into a pair of hibees
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27-05-2011 02:16 PM #21
I occasionally went to Tynecastle to watch the Jambos when Hibs were playing away. I was too young to be trusted to get on a bus or train and leave Edinburgh and it was the done thing in the late 60's/early 70's.
I even cheered when they scored a goal. It wasn't often as they were really abysmal at the time and their crowds were even more abysmal.
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27-05-2011 03:27 PM #22
Performed a couple of successful exorcisms on (former) Yams over the years. Two chaps in particular owe me a great deal, I've saved them from pathetic delusion, paedophille sexual tendency and rabid war nostalgia in one fell swoop.
It makes a healthy outdoor life on the road caravaning and rive tarmacking worthwhile.
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27-05-2011 04:14 PM #23
I am a Hibs supporter but in the early 60's used to go week about to ER and Slimecastle. Then I discovered the Hibs Supporters club and their away travel plan of juniors selling 10 hibs bingo tickets each week to get free transport on their supporters' buses for away games. After that, I only attended Slimecastle when Hibs played there.
Does the HSA still have such a plan for our future fans?
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27-05-2011 04:37 PM #24
I used to be mates with a guy originally from Glasgow who started off as a Rangers fan, moved through here when he was 7 or so and was indoctrinated into the Mini-Hun coven at Tynie and eventually, in his late teens, turned to Hibs after rejecting 'that religious sh*te'. Still see him now at ER after almost 25 years.
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27-05-2011 10:57 PM #25
Knew a guy that had yam family ties but not his Dad who wasn't a football fan. He stayed in a Hibs part of town and went to a mostly Hibs supporting school and most of his pals were Hibees he was a yam till we were about 16-17 then switched to the good side much to the annoyance of his sister!
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27-05-2011 11:45 PM #26
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The only person I can think of is the fat striker himself.
John Robertson, Hibs fan as a boy and young man but Hearts legend, duff manager and chief cheerleader for the last 25 years hence
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27-05-2011 11:52 PM #27
I've got a mate in his early 20s, who, I kid you not, has supported four different SPL teams in the past 10 years.
He's from Livingston, so started off supporting Livi - I remember him taunting me at school after they beat us in THAT league cup final - but when things went downhill for them, he decided he was a Hearts fan. This was coincidentally when Burley was manager and they won the Champions League in front of a full house of 400,000.
He then decided that he was a Hibs fan and celebrated our 5-1 win over Killie in the league cup final.
However, following our slight decline, he's now decided that Celtic are his team.
Glory-hunting wee bassa that he is
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28-05-2011 12:08 AM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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28-05-2011 01:23 AM #29
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This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The weird thing is I managed to turn them both into hibees at around the same time (couple months ago) and they've both got their season tickets ordered for next season
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28-05-2011 03:38 AM #30
I'm not frightened to admit that I came from what some might consider a "neutral" background...and from a relatively late age. I had one of those old school upbringings where I was taken to Easter Road one week then Tynecastle the next when I was young.
My Dad was a Hibby and he took me to my first game which was the league cup final in 1985. However, a family friend at the time was a Jambo and they used to go to Tynecstle regularly and offered to take me along...which my dad agreed to providing we went to the right areas.
From that time until about 1990 I went to both ER and Tynie to watch matches.
For me, that period was all about the experience of going to matches...not who was playing. The crowd, the colours, the chants...it was all great no matter where I was or who I was with.
My heroes weren't club related, they were the "greats" on show. Paul McStay, Davie Cooper, John Robertson, Mickey Weir and others stick in my mind from that time.
After that period I started getting into other things like music and drugs (which was the norm for a teenager in the early-mid nineties) and I couldn't have cared less about football. Being from deepest slateford 90% of my mates were Jambos and I sometimes used to go along to games with them. It wasn't really about the football then it was more about the social aspect. I'd say for every Hibs game I went to with my dad in the nineties I went to a hearts game with my mates. The fact the teams were from Edinburgh was enough for me.
I actually used to feel sorry for hearts back then. You have to remember that before 1998 the joke was on Hearts because they were the ones who had won nothing for 36 years. They were the "poor relation" even though this 22 in a row thing was happening.
The tipping point came when we got relegated and Hearts won the Scottish cup. I thought I would feel good for my true jambo mates seeing their faces after such a triumph but I felt empty and hollow. I'll admit I was in Gorgie indulging in 56p pints but I'll never forget my dads face when I came home that night. Tears were shed.
I felt guilty and dirty...as if I'd abandoned my wife in her time of need and I'd been cheating on her with a cheap prostitute for all those years.
Some people who haven't seen me since the mid nineties might point me out as a Jambo but I'm cool with that because I know what I'm all about. Looking back I might have been cheering for the team whos end I was in but during the derby there was only one team I really wanted to win...and that was the Hibs.
People might question my alliegiance to hibs by stating the fact that I went to hearts matches but I can turn round and say I've made an informed choice. However, the honest answer is that it isn't about personal choice.
When your dad plants a team in your heart when you're young there is no escaping...you'll always love them no matter what your footballing upbringing experiences are.
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