Why has the Cup lost its romance? : Mon May 09, 2011 10:27 am
No matter how much you spin it when you're having a good Cup run, however you cut it when you're trying to defend old traditions ... the Challenge Cup is nothing like the force it once used to be.There's no doubt that it's a great trophy to win, and you can't beat the atmosphere at Wembley itself, yet for some reason or other the Challenge Cup tournament is now regarded by most as the secondary event of the season.
It's not easy for a Wigan fan to admit this as Wigan were the original 'Cup Kings' - Wembley was our second home, and we basked in so much Twin Towers glory that it was almost impossible to imagine a world without it. Yet now, within in a relatively short period of time, people just don't seem to get excited any more.
I remember awaiting each new Cup draw with baited breath. I remember seeing massive crowds at Central Park when the atmosphere of 'knock-out' day was almost intoxicating. I don't feel any of that now. I actually forgot that the next round draw was being made this weekend.
Is it the much mentioned 'season ticket factor'? Is it the lack of interest that Sky have in this 'BBC competition'? Is it the BBC themselves - did they suddenly decide that 'the people's final' was an anachronism? Was it that dratted period when the Cup was a pre-season event and the final moved from pillar to post? Or could it simply be that, fond though we are of old institutions, in our heart of hearts we recognise that there is a huge amount of luck involved in getting to Wembley and that to win the Cup is no longer the true measure of a team's worth?
I wish someone could tell me, because I really feel that this magical event has been badly downgraded and that the British game as a whole is worse off for it.