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The West Ham Chronicles – Part One

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BoleynMy journey as a West Ham United fan begins in a Junior School playground in the autumn of 1985.  I was 7 years old living in Leigh on Sea, with no local club to support, Southend United?  Nah not having that!  Therefore, I had the choice of many a club to support and perhaps at the age I was and with Liverpool winning everything in sight I could have followed the ‘sheep’ and became a plastic scouser.

To my credit, I did not go down that path and following a game of football in the playground, with the token small tennis ball which all kids used in the 1980’s my friend picked me for his side and told me that I could play up front as Tony Cottee.  From that moment the up and down journey of being a supporter of West Ham United began.

Things were good at first, West Ham regularly won games, scored goals and had a flamboyant blonde striker who would become my first West Ham hero.  We finished 3rd, top club in London and next season I was sure that we would win the league, no problem!  I should have known better, my Dad, who was raised in East Ham and Barking should have sat me down and warned me that this is West Ham, don’t dare to dream!  I can still pinpoint the first time that West Ham let me down; Spurs 5 West Ham 0, in early 1987, there was mutiny on the playground as claret and blue turned to white, suddenly West Ham were deemed not very good and some of my friends showed weakness and turned to the dark side, I still do not trust them to this day!  I stayed loyal, what could I do?!  I had the full replica kit (home & away), Frank McAvennie did not play for the dark side and as far as I was concerned West Ham would regain the heights of a few months earlier.

Tony CotteeFrank MacAvennie

Funnily enough it as it this point where I first went to the Boleyn Ground with my Dad.  Less funny was that we lost 2-0 to Norwich, however, I loved everything about the day and my addictive, love-hate relationship with West Ham United really began.

So here I am now, June 2013 and we have just finished mid-table in our first season back in the Premier League.  Things are strangely calm, we have a manager who, while splits opinion, is doing the job which is being asked of him, the owners are West Ham through and through and we are moving to a new stadium which should take us to the next level.  The only way is up surely?!   Yeah righto, this is West Ham United if it can go wrong then it will go wrong horribly wrong.

So what defines for me being a Hammer?  There is a number of things and in all honesty it is hard to define or explain.  However, I shall attempt to rhyme some reasoning to it all and share with you some of my thoughts and memories;

The Boleyn Ground

Prior to the stadium becoming all seater, I simply loved everything about the ground.  The way supporters were on top of the players, the incredible atmosphere, the general feel and smell of the old place.  Granted, it was not in the greatest condition, but this was not ever the point, it was intimidating for the away team and for me as a youngster, just such an exciting place to be.  Once I was old enough to go to games on my own I used to stand on the North Bank, sometimes I could not see a great deal, but to be honest I did not really care, it cost very little to get in, I and my mates could stand where we want and feel free to jump around without a care in the world.  As we got older we promoted ourselves to the Chicken Run, now this truly was great times, so many characters that we nicknamed such as Jesus, Brit-pop Man, The Bear and Both and Tarbuck!! These names will, I imagine, mean nothing to you, but I am sure you can identify with my way of thinking!

The ground is now not recognisable from those days and to be honest no longer holds the affection that I once held for it.  However, on certain games (Ipswich in the play-off semi in 2004) it can give you that special feeling.  I have had a season ticket in the Bobby Lower for last couple of seasons and you still get the characters but I feel it is now time to move on as the old ground is now feeling rather tired.  Sadly I don’t think the Olympic Stadium will ever give me that feeling that the Boleyn did and when we move a part of my West Ham United will fade into history.

The 1992-1993 Season

Why you may ask?!  We had just been relegated of the back of the disastrous Bond season, the club was at all-time low, fans in uproar and our squad was in all honesty not very good.   Did I care?  No, this was the first season that my parents let me go on my own to the football and I was going to take advantage!  My mates and I had our spot on the North Bank and following a shaky start the team was looking good.  Trevor Morley and Clive Allen were banging the goals in left, right and centre, Julian Dicks was exceptional, except when he was getting sent off every other week!  The games were entertaining and it all came to any exciting conclusion on the last day where it came down to us or Portsmouth as to who would go up with Newcastle.  Cambridge United at home was our fixture and on paper an easy win.  In typical West Ham fashion we made it difficult until the anti-hero David Speedie put us in front, Julian then ran halfway up the pitch squared it to Clive Allen, 2-0 and we were back in the big time.

This season while certainly not the best in terms of football played and in what continued to be a turbulent time in the clubs history, crowds were well down as the fans continued to show their disgust to the board with regards the Bond scheme, will remain in my eyes a special time.  I was hooked and a season ticket was purchased the next season without hesitation.

Julian Dicks

Julian Dicks

My ultimate West Ham hero, he had everything you looked for in a footballer, skill, passion, determination, aggression and loyalty.

Julian played for us during some pretty torrid times, that being two relegations, however, he remained a joy to watch.  He could score goals, was deadly from the penalty spot and liked a tackle (that is putting mildly) and most importantly considering he was a left back he could defend.  As mentioned above  in season 92-93 he was amazing, despite the red cards and when we sold him to Liverpool soon after I was devastated.  In the short-term it was a great deal for the club, however, we were lumbered with Lee Chapman for a period of time!  When he returned I was elated, so excited to see the main man back and until injury struck he remained our best player and more often than not rather embarrassingly our main goal threat.

I believe that we have not ever replaced him at left back since his retirement in 1999, remember Scott Minto? (Shudders!)

Julian is coaching now and given his obvious passion for West Ham it is disappointing a role has not been found for him at the club, surely he has something to offer?

Tottenham Hotspur 

Now don’t get me wrong, horrible mob this lot but they have given me some of my best and worst memories.

Season 93/94, we play them away towards end of season, we are safe, they are not, unbelievably we win 4-1 and to this day this remains my greatest away day with the Hammers.  I still remember the goal scorers; Rag Doll Morley got two, Mike Marsh with one and Steve “Steptoe” Jones, scored the other goal despite the worst first touch ever.  Another fond memory was Matthew Rush calling Sol Campbell a rude name, for all the West Ham fans to hear!  Think “See you next Tuesday” and you will get my drift!  A few weeks later we went to Highbury and turned Arsenal over 2-0!  Granted they had their second string out as they had a cup final coming up, but did I give a monkeys!?

Season 96/97, we are in trouble at the bottom, Harry Redknapp is in last chance saloon, following the failure of his foreign buying policy.  He has splashed the cash on John Hartson and Paul Kitson to get us out of trouble.  Spurs visit us on a cold, windy February evening and this game had the lot, we end up winning 4-3, Julian is amazing in one of last games before his knee gives up again, while Hartson and Kitson bang the goals in.  The win gives the team the confidence for rest of the season and in the end we comfortably stay up.

Season 06/07, West Ham are rock bottom, relegation looks a formality, Alan Curbishley will not pick our best player, namely one South American who would end up costing the club millions.  Spurs are in town and must fancy their chances.  We lose the game 4-3 in heart-breaking fashion, however it is the turning point in what had been a depressing season.  Tevez scores and is up and running, the team find some self-belief from the despair and we go on an incredible run which sees us secure safety at Old Trafford on the last day of the season.  I could not make this game, so watched it down the local pub, a mix of Hammers and Spurs fans, despite the cruel defeat, it was the Hammers in the pubs singing into the night as the Spurs boys just watched on, smugness on their faces but deep down wishing they had such passion and pride for their football club.

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38 comments

  • Greg says:

    Excellent stuff mate. Can still feel the tingles from that play-off semi.

  • Ian Smith says:

    You pride yourself on not being a sheep, but you are one. You dismiss your local team with “Nah not having that” and go for a top flight team and become a plastic hammer. If you were going to be a proper supporter, you would have gone for the one you were lumbered with, Southend, not one you ‘chose’ – then you’d know what ups and downs were about!

  • TrueBlue says:

    No local club to support???? Sorry fella but your a joke and its the elitist attitude of of I will support the nearest large club attitude that has ruined football being from Leigh you should be supporting Southend!!! I am from Southend even though my dad was from canning town and tried to make me west ham why should I be I am from Southend in Essex born in Rochford hospital what affiliation or what part of me makes me East London? ZERO!!!

    Have a think before casting off your local side before running up the A127!,

    Southend and proud

  • rararblue says:

    Don’t know if you have children yourself, but if you do and still live in Leigh or thereabouts, do them a favour and take them down to Roots Hall and encourage them to support their local ‘REAL’ football team!

  • Fiestorm says:

    Liviing in Leigh on Sea, There was local football team to support,
    Its a shame that kids feel that to support a team it has to be one in the upper reaches of the football pyramid rather than the one associated wth their community.

    Around 1985 West Ham had a club shop in Southend, a town with their own professional club, which shows a disgraceful lack of respect for the lower league sand epitomises what has now blown up into the premier league superiority complex we have now.

    Support (and by that i don’t mean watch them on Sky whilst drinking tea from a mug with a club crest on it) your local team.

  • Roger (Millwall) says:

    So you don’t to be a sheep yet you jump on the band wagon of West Ham (a big club) rather than the side where you are from who are three miles from you home.

    Your a plastic fan as much as the Liverpool fans you mention. Much like many of you fellow Essex men supporters who claim to be cockneys but are really Essex men. Pathetic.

  • Ian says:

    Blimey take a chill pill guys is just an article I wrote about being a West Ham fan and why I am one.
    And just for the record I have had a season ticket for many a year, if I showed a lack of respect as a 7 year old, then please forgive me!
    Oh and I agree with some of the points you make about sky and the premier league.

    • Fiestorm says:

      Ian, The lack of respect comment was aimed at your club, not you.
      I feel that its a shame that that a 7 year old feels that they can’t follow their local team .

      Its a dfferent feeling suporting a Lower league team, the highs are far more varied, the lows far more depressing. The loyalty is more intense.
      Whilst i would not suggest you turn your back on your adopted team, give your birth team team a try, you might not get the “Premier league experience” but it will cerainly open your eyes to true football support.

  • A Century United says:

    For all your “Spine Tingling” moments, I wouldn’t swap one second of supporting my local team, Southend, for all the reflected glory you have enjoyed as a Plastic Spammer. Yes, there have been plenty of gloomy depressing times, but they are what give perspective to the few great moments. You are a “Fan” but you missed the chance of being a true supporter when you chose the easy option.

  • Col.U. Mad says:

    Have to agree with above comments. It’s akin to me deciding to support Ipswich.

  • Lenny says:

    No local side? Are you retarded or just never seen a map? It’s people like you who ruin football in our area. Supporting west ham because they’re your biggest local side, not your local side… Honestly though would rather have our true support instead of the easily persuaded scum like you..

    Guess you’ll be a city fan if they win the league this season?

  • Ian says:

    Retarded and scum, yeah thanks for that…….

  • Joe says:

    That first paragraph sums up exactly why me and lots of other Southend fans despise West Ham.

  • ChapperzUK says:

    You dismiss Southend United without a real reason, maybe you should actual explain why as it just seems that you don’t support them because they aren’t a big or successful club.

  • Yogi Bear says:

    Sad, deracinated Spammer. Never will be able to savour the REAL pride of following your own local club. Perhaps you would like to define the difference between becoming a ‘plastic scoucer’ and a ‘plastic spammer’. Your heart may be in East London but your soul remains on the Essex coast.

  • JM says:

    Looking forward to the World Cup ?

    Who will you be supporting?

    Brazil ? Argentina ? Cant imagine you want to support England, too close.

  • John m says:

    Yet another example of the mockney scumbags that ignore their local team, but because they support West Ham they think they’re still keeping it real.
    You should be ashamed of yourself, i know i am!

  • Ian says:

    Ok, now lets fall out hey. I support West Ham always have and always will, yes I am fully aware that Southend United is closer I am a grown adult! I like Southend united as a football club always will. Now If I have disprespected you as fans then that was never my intnetion it was just something I wrote about my times as a Hammer.
    Got plenty of mates who support Southend in addition to West Ham, Spurs, Liverpool etc, now are they scum?
    Happy to have a good football debate with fans of all clubs, in the end that it was it as all about.
    Yes I will be supporting England at the World Cup, that is if we make it to Brazil though!

    • JM says:

      People do support Southend and other teams, thats only natural. I was born in Essex and my family come from Islington so the natural thing to do was support Arsenal like the rest of my family did.

      However as soon as I was old enough to go to games I went to Southend.

      What winds up fans of lower league clubs is people who dont even consider supporting their local side in any way.

      Ive been to Arsenal games and to be honest I always felt like an outsider, travelling that far to watch a team never felt right to me and whilst they are my 2nd team I would gladly never see them win a trophy (nothing new there) again if it mean Southend had 10 years in the Championship.

  • Laika says:

    You made a terrible error in judgement as a child and for that you can be forgiven. However it may not be wise to criticise other people’s teams with such a throwaway comment.

  • Ian says:

    Yes my comment I admit was a bit flipant but it was not meant as a dig!
    Like you say the choice was made as a child and it was engrained in me at a young age. I have been all over the country watching West Ham, so I am not plastic.
    I can understand why you get the hump with West Ham, given the shop that used to be in town centre and we played our reserve games at Roots Hall!

    John M, how are Liverpool doing? Enjoy making a massive loss on Carroll?! I am ashamed of you too my friend!

  • Kevin says:

    An appalling error of judgement. You will never know how much it feels to support “your own” – your team.

    West Ham United? Not even close to Southend United. The passion, the desire..the hope!! When the glory happens (rare) it is the ultimate! It is ours!

    C’MON YOU SHRIMPERS!!!

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