The Lincoln United Development Trials Day will take place on Saturday the 4th of July at 10.00am at the Ravendale Sports Ground.
With UEFA qualified coaches and a supportive enviroment that pushes you to be the best, it offers a genuine pathway to first team football.
Email [email protected] to book your place today. We will see you there!
#UTW 🤍 | 📸 Ed Mayes Photography
@JamesAlexKirby Crazy how quiet some pubs are now which is sad , whole country being forced to work to afford fuck all to then just repeat cycle with no joy in sight
Country is fucked
Work hard get shafted and repeat 🥹🥹
@domrevill@davefrecks@LincolnUtdJosh@maladict23 Could be money could be chance or change of scene could be logistics could be closer to work there’s a whole host of reasons
Agree it’s poor to agree to commit then jump but that’s also football at the level I guess , I’m sure there will be a lot who want to play at Lincoln Utd
Most working UK adults haven't had an actual weekend in years.
Saturday morning is the chore catch-up — the food shop, the laundry, the bins, the post, the things you didn't have the energy for during the week.
Saturday afternoon is the only real free time most people get all week. About 4-5 hours of it. It usually gets spent recovering from the morning's admin.
Saturday evening is dinner, telly, a couple of drinks, an early-ish bed because Sunday isn't going to be much easier.
Sunday is part chores, part dread. By 6pm you're already mentally on Monday. By 9pm you're laying out clothes and checking the alarm.
What people call 'a weekend' is, in practice, about 6 hours of actual leisure — fragmented into 30-90 minute chunks between admin, recovery, and pre-emptive Monday anxiety.
This is why working people in their thirties spend their twenties thinking 'this will improve when I'm earning more.' It doesn't — the shape stays exactly the same, only the cost of living it goes up.