Cracker wrote:When I read this site I have never heard so many moaners in my life.
If we are real Ulster Rugby supporters it is time we all moved on and accept things as they are as they are not going to change anything just because we constantly complain about everything that is done or players signed.
We have got to accept what has happened whether we like it or not ( and personally I don't like much of it)and by posting constant negative remarks we are only doing a disservice to Ulster Rugby. I dread to think what any of our new signings think when they read all the negative comments made.
We start with a clean sheet and I among many others have renewed my seasons ticket and am looking forward to the new season.
I have held my tongue on these opinions until now as my emotions are still extremely raw.
There are people who turn up to watch Ulster rugby for a few beers and a craic with mates to unwind and the rugby is secondary to that.
I get that and have no dramas with it as I was amongst a 20/20 cricket crowd at the Oval doing the same thing this week as were the vast majority.
Moving on is fairly easy from that viewpoint.
Yet for most on here Ulster rugby is a way of life.
Witnessing recent events if you want an analogy, was a bit like watching your best mate taking your sister to the cleaners in a divorce then dealing with the fallout.
Then random strangers come along and tell you to get over it and take your mate out for a pint.
In 99.999% of those situations you'll be told to get te feck.
For me it's all about the empathy from our club or lack of it.
I thought they were better than that but it turns out they were just another soulless cooperate entity that doesn't give a stuff.
It's that realisation that you are witnessing unravel on here.
Ulster rugby is very hard to love right now and it does genuinely feel like I have lost one of my oldest and best mates.
Incidently just edited my language in the last paragraph from "we" to "they" concerning Ulster rugby.
Divorce complete.