Man city poznan why




















UFC Satsning. Apostas em corridas de cavalos - onde apostar nos cavalos. Tennis-Wetten - Wo ist der beste Ort, um auf Tennis zu wetten? Bet Bonus Code. Baseball 9. Basketball Boxing Football Golf MMA Other Soccer Tennis What is the Poznan Celebration? The dance involves fans turning their backs to the field, linking arms and jumping up and down in unison. In many parts of Europe this dance is known among football fans as "Greque". The City supporters first adopted the dance in October during a Europa League match against Lech Poznan which they incidentally won and labeled it "Poznan" as a homage to its originators.

Initially the City fans were unimpressed with the bouncy movements and enquired the Polish club's fans what it was they were exactly doing. But they were eventually won over enough to adopt it. The Poznan went on to become such a compelling spectacle that it attracted as many as 1.

This celebratory form spread to Leicester City where fans of the club performed it in a third round encounter with Manchester City prompting the British media to coin it as "doing the Poznan". Down the years, the dance was used by fans of rival clubs to mock Manchester City. Cardiff City supporters did that when they beat City in a August League encounter. Arsenal fans erupted into Poznan celebrations when Mikel Arteta scored the winning goal for the Gunners in April Leaving aside the mockery of rival clubs, the Poznan has become a trademark of Man City fan celebrations.

The adoption of this celebratory style by the club fans has coincided with the rise of City fortunes. City fans haven't been short of excuses to perform the Poznan in recent years. The Premier League title in became theirs after a huge gap of 44 years.

The feat was repeated in the season. In the ongoing season, they are tied at the top with Chelsea in the Premier League tables and are sniffing at the title for a possible third consecutive time.

One can be sure Man City fans will find more and more occasions to break into a "Poznan dance" something that they made it their very own. Tools Betting Odds Conversion. Races Melbourne Cup.

Upcoming Contests. Wembley was treated to something even stranger than a Manchester City win on Saturday; its first ever staging of "the Poznan".

This dance, inspired by the Polish side Lech Poznan, has been the bizarre backdrop to City's season. After the brief unpleasantness between Mario Balotelli and Rio Ferdinand, the City players and staff performed the Poznan on the pitch itself, with their backs to the City fans.

It started last autumn. The match was fairly unremarkable; City won thanks to a rare Emmanuel Adebayor hat-trick. Much more notable were the Poznan supporters, widely thought to be the best fans ever to come to Eastlands.

Through the game the Poznan fans impressed with their noise, organisation and creativity. They are famous for this: there is footage online of their fervour at an unders game against a Tottenham Hotspur side. Flares, singing, bouncing; it is a compelling spectacle and well worth the 1.

While City fans were initially unimpressed with the backs-turned bounce, politely enquiring of the Polish fans what they were doing, they were won over and soon adopted it as their own.

Nothing is quite as appealing to City fans as the irreverent and the absurd, as shown by the inflatable bananas craze.



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