Fans say ‘now this is farmer’s league’ as Erling Haaland’s first club offer VIP tickets to watch match from TRACTOR

2 months ago 25

FOOTBALL fans in Norway have been offered the chance to watch games from a bizarre VIP area.

Bryne FK is inviting supporters to enjoy their promotion push from the comfort of a pitchside TRACTOR.

a soccer game is being played in front of a banner that says turning ideas into realityReddit
Fans at Bryne FK can park their tractors by the pitch in a VIP section[/caption]
three boys sit on a couch in front of a scoreboard that says bry 0Reddit
Supporters of the club were spotted enjoying a recent game from the vantage point[/caption]
a soccer player in a red and white uniform with masi on his shortsGetty
Erling Haaland begin his career at the club as a teenager[/caption]

The 1. Divisjon club are currently pushing for promotion to Norway’s top flight.

Bryne are famous for nurturing a young Erling Haaland and last played in the Eliteserien back in 2003.

Situated in an agricultural area, the club have come up with a novel way of packing the stands at the 4,000 capacity Bryne Stadion.

Fans have been invited to drive their tractors directly into the stadium.

The club’s official website explains: “Drive your tractor to the match and park it at Bryne Stadium.

“Drive the tractor into the gate at the clubhouse, park the tractor towards the pitch and watch the match from the cab.”

Up to four fans can join the driver for the reasonable price of NOK 250, around £18.

One group of supporters have since gone viral for their exclusive pitchside seats.

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A trio were seen seated on a sofa, raised up and supported by the tractor’s scooper.

One fan laughed in response to the viral image: “Looks comfy ngl.”

Another said: “Now this is a farmer’s league.”

While a third asked: “What if you need to pee or grab another beer?”

And a fourth joked: “I’d still get a tall guy with a hat on in a slightly bigger tractor sat in front of me.”

Bryne are currently second in the 1. Divisjon behind runaway leaders Valerenga.

The top two in the division will be promoted, with the season ending in early November.

We thought games like this had been lost

SunSport's NEIL CUSTIS hails chaotic Man City vs Arsenal clash as a return to the Premier League of yesteryear.

FOR two teams who have done so much to take the game forward this really was a tremendous throwback.

We thought these games had been lost.

Real feisty encounters between two rivals fighting for the top honours.

How we used to love it when Manchester United came up against Arsenal when Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger were in charge.

When Roy Keane, watching on as a TV pundit here, used to clash with Patrick Vieira before a ball had been kicked.

The Manchester derbies used to have it as well.

In fact that were clashes everywhere throughout the league.

Since then the emphasis on the beauty of the game, the tactical side, the ball playing centre-back, the false nine, the inverted full-backs have all come to the fore.

But English football still loves something like this.

Compare this to the two matches between this pair last season not least the really STALEmate here.

Then along comes a blood and thunder classic.

A match to set the tone for what we all hope will be a real title tussle to the end but with that added edge.

While these two managers maybe good friends who knows we may even get the niggly comments in pre-match press conferences about each others teams.

We knew we were in for something a bit different as straight from the kick-off Kai Havertz charged into Rodri and left him flawed.

The first players’ melee ensued.

Foreign coaches often scratch their heads as to why English crowds love stuff like this.

Love a thumping tackle, or a bit of a barney.

How that as much as any sweeping move gets them to the edge of their seats and there was plenty of that here.

Jurrien Timber was employed on the right to combat the pace of Jeremy Doku.

SO Doku just charged into him and floored him.

Rodri was clearly seen as one of City’s key men so at a corner Thoams Party followed up Havertz’s early example and caught him behind the knee, and the player hobbled out of the action.

Gabriel and Erling Haaland was a classic battle between a big centre-forward and an Arsenal centre-back who performs like greats of old like Tony Adams and Martin Keown.

A player for whom a thumping tackle warrants the same high fives or celebrations as something defining at the other end of the pitch.

Haaland did brilliantly to pull away William Saliba and slip behind Gabriel for his goal.

Gabriel will have been fuming having kept the big Norwegian so quiet last season.

He barely gave him another sniff of goal, barring a second-half header saved, as he stuck to him, the pair often pushing and shoving one another as Haaland became frustrated with his shadow.

Leandro Trossard did not get his second yellow and therefore the only red for the actual barge on Bernardo as everyone first thought but for kicking the ball away after that.

Both technical areas were a flurry of arm waving and shouting from the two managers.

The staff on the two benches started having a go at each other and Guardiola had to intervene.

In the press box one of Arsenal’s technical staff was losing it.

As Arsenal players went down with cramp and played for time the boos went up.

The fourth official was getting in the ear.

Michael Oliver was being told he was not fit to referee by a large section of the home support.

When Arsenal fans were spotted in the posh seats having been in the expensive tunnel club City fans shouted and pointed to try and get them ejected.

Right at the end after City’s dramatic equaliser and the game restarted Haaland barged into Partey and every player on the pitch got involved even the two goalkeepers.

At the final whistle the ref was harrangued.

On the touchline Guardiola and Arteta hugged.

SunSport visited Bryne in 2022 and found plenty of love in the air for local boy Haaland.

The Man City goal machine joined his local team at just five and made his debut a decade later.

By 16 he was gone, signing for Molde in the top flight, but made a lasting impression.

Haaland’s former teammate Robert Undheim said: “Everybody knew he was a childhood star.

“One of the first times I saw him he was just a little kid but he had this quickness and you saw there was something special. He had everything.”

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