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When Saturday comes
When Saturday comes
26th August 2009
London clubs are on top as new season starts with a bang
It's early days in the 2009/10 football season but already Tottenham, Chelsea and Arsenal occupy the top three places in the Premier League table.
Symbolically, both Manchester clubs, United and City, lie in 4th and 5th place, underlining the North-South divide that has seen London clubs take tentative pole position after three games.
Of course, we're all used to seeing the likes of Arsenal and Chelsea towards the summit, but this is fresh territory for Spurs, serial underachievers and the capital's most unsuccessful side last year.
Rewind 12 months and Spurs under Juande Ramos were rooted to the bottom of the League after a terrible opening; one year on, and Harry Redknapp is presiding over the team's best League start since 1960 - the year Spurs were last crowned champions. Granted, the chances of history repeating itself are pretty unlikely - sorry Spurs fans! - but it must give some light relief to a sorry section of London's population usually so glum come 5.45pm on a Saturday afternoon.
Across the North London divide, rivals Arsenal are enjoying an equally resplendent start to the campaign. At the time of writing, the Gunners have played just two League matches, but are sitting pretty in third place with a mammoth goal difference of +8. Not bad for a so-called weak and inexperienced side written off by most journos at the start of the season after selling two of their star players to the oil-rich financial force that is Man City.
I was at Arsenal's first home game of the season last Saturday as the Gunners welcomed pointless Portsmouth to the Emirates Stadium. The match was a rather subdued affair, with Arsenal's free-flowing artists making they whole thing seem like a training exercise as they cantered to a 4-1 demolition of the struggling South coast outfit.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the day was, in fact, the rolling out of a new club policy of "Arsenalisation" which saw every fan given a red and white scarf in a bid to inject a bit more oomph into the habitually staid confines of the Emirates.
Now Arsenal fans have never been renowned for their bellowing chants, and while calling former home 'The Highbury Library' was a bit harsh, it was certainly no Anfield or Celtic Park. But compared to Emirates, however, the intimate, contained Highbury was a veritable caldron of cacophony.
Such is the open design of the club's current 60,000+ capacity stadium, which was opened in July 2006, any noise generated by the home fans is usually lost to the leafy Islington air. Given the fact that most Gooners prefer to sit back and enjoy their team's silky movement in silent contemplation of its existential merits, the place is as quiet as a mausoleum. On Saturday - as is the case most match days - even the 1,000-odd away fans were more vocal.
This isn't helped by the apparent disunion in the stands or by the central 'club class' ring of seats - you know, the ones which usually empty five minutes before the start of half-time and only fill back up well into the second period.
(The reason for this, by the way, is quite clear: club class spectators get free drinks during the break, which are laid out on tables in the surrounding lounge. The earlier you leave, the better chance you have of picking up a full glass which, incidentally, you can refill, free of charge, at the bar afterwards - explaining in turn the late filling up of seats as the second half gets under way.)
Club bigwigs believe that what the Emirates needs is an injection of all things Arsenal, a bit of soul in an otherwise soulless stadium. They have commissioned 12 'greatest moments' murals to spruce up the outside walls of the concrete edifice and have lined up a whole series of installations and visuals to remind fans of the illustrious achievement of their club and its players.
Inside, a trademark white cannon has been daubed onto the stand opposite the tunnel while the legendary Highbury clock is set to be installed. Laying more than 60,000 scarves on seats throughout the stadium was another bid to trigger the emotive capacity of supporters.
If I was being Devil's Advocate I'd say that the fact that the club hierarchy feels the need to go to such drastic measures to whip up a sense of community spirit amongst fans underlines the uphill struggle they're going to have. Put simply, if you have to create an atmosphere by giving people scarves then perhaps the club is never going to have that good an atmosphere at all. (It can't help matters much when your stadium is named after a Middle Eastern airline either.)
What's more, if you have no qualms about creating a word for such measures - Arsenalisation - and discuss it openly on your club website, as if it were a blend of mathematics and science where you add A to B to get C, then you're clearly bordering on the delusional.
Back on the pitch, Arsene Wenger's unbeaten side face Man United this Saturday in the season's first clash between two of the League's traditional 'Top Four' clubs.
Being at Old Trafford, the atmosphere should be pretty special - but if Arsenal do manage to maintain their 100% record then it will do the whole Arsenalisation bid a world of good. For the only way Arsenal are going to create a new community spirit amongst supporters is by giving them something to cheer about.
It's no use harking back to the glory days of Highbury and the Invincibles. The reality is that there is no history so far at the Emirates except one of emptiness and underachievement. Only the players can change that.
Thuggery mars derby clash
Say what you like about the sterility of the Emirates, but it's surely better than its polar opposite. The spectre of hooliganism rose once more to the surface of English football during a midweek Carling Cup match between London rivals West Ham and Millwall. These "planned" scuffles, which saw more than 100 fans trade blows and throw bricks and bottles, appeared to have been caused by people without tickets to the game. But the nasty scenes spilled onto the terraces with a series of pitch invasions by the home fans following their goals in the 3-1 extra-time win. One 44-year-old man was stable in hospital after being stabbed in the chest in a night which needed 200 officers in full riot gear and 20 mounted policemen to quell the violence.
Stealing the town jewels
You wait an age for a good old-fashioned jewellery heist and then, like the proverbial bus, two come along in quick succession. Just two weeks after a couple of be-suited men audaciously made off with £40m worth of jewels from New Bond Street jewellers Graff, a mob of six men on motorbikes launched a smash-and-grab on a Knightsbridge jeweller stealing gems worth more than £1m in just one minute. Three men have been charged in connection with the Graff robbery - Britain's biggest jewellery heist - although the two men caught on CCTV are still at large (presumably drinking daiquiris on a beach in Mexico). Coincidentally, the previous largest jewellery heist in the UK was a £23m robbery at the same shop in 2003. Talk about lightning never striking twice.
Busking for Boris
Commuters can allay their anger that the on-going weekend work on the Jubilee Line might run well over schedule into 2010 with news that the standard of busking on the London Underground network is set to improve thanks to an X Factor-style play-off between young musicians in front of mayor Boris Johnston. Buskers aged 16-25 have already posted their recordings online as they bid to win 20-minute slots at seven stations. At the end of the month the 20 buskers with the most votes will be whittled down to 10 by a panel of judges before a special "busk-off" in front of Boris. While it's hard to see Boris dismiss floundering acts with the same acerbic bile as Simon Cowell, it's distressing to think that the blond buffoon might have a say on what we listen to while making those annoying diversions owing to the Jubilee Line closure…
2011
| 5th April | Royal Wedding fever strikes London |
| 23rd February | London's deep pockets |
| 17th February | Let the London Games begin |
| 29th January | Olympic no-brainer |
2010
| 23rd December | Snow causes London meltdown |
| 28th November | London's Big Bang for 2011 |
| 21st October | I predict a riot |
| 26th August | The Maddening Rain |
| 26th July | Holmes sweet Holmes |
| 23rd June | Sun shines on London |
| 23rd June | Loving London's Pub Theatres |
| 27th May | The Cameron-Clegg Civil Ceremony |
| 25th May | Budgy Smuggling |
| 27th April | No Fly Zone |
| 26th April | Mi casa es su casa - and Tesco's |
| 29th March | No Third Runway |
| 19th March | It's not a Library |
| 24th February | Bully Tactics at No. 10 |
| 22nd February | Whine connoisseur |
| 26th January | Carbuncle City |
| 20th January | A Laugh a Day... |
| 3rd January | Stalking in Richmond |
2009
| 29th December | Predictions for 2010 |
| 30th November | London 1 Paris 0 |
| 27th November | Mr Benn, The Wombles |
| 26th October | Posties Strike a Chord |
| 26th October | Frieze Still Pleases |
| 26th September | A River Runs Through It |
| 23rd September | Blogging is Best |
| 26th August | When Saturday comes |
| 22nd August | Bring on the Bikes |
| 27th July | Against the Clock |
| 20th July | View for a thrill |
| 18th June | Let Them Eat Cake |
| 16th June | Only Fools And Horses? |
| 26th May | Come Rain Or Shine |
| 18th May | Embarrassing Expenses |
| 27th April | New Designs on Old Fossils |
| 19th April | City Slickers |
| 26th March | Woody Set for Rematch |
| 10th March | Take a Bow, London |
| 18th February | New Photography Laws |
| 12th February | Glitz and the Pitts |
| 27th January | Setting the Standard |
| 21st January | Too Much for Posh Nosh? |
2008
| 23rd December | January is on the Horizon |
| 20th December | Merry Christmas |
| 26th November | All The World's A Stage |
| 20th November | Surviving the Crunch |
| 24th October | Boris v Jingjing |
| 17th October | Soaps in Pole Position |
| 23rd September | Chips too Chavvy for Chelsea |
| 16th September | The London Restaurant Awards |
| 26th August | No Smoking, No Ducks, No Barbecues |
| 20th August | The Olympics |
| 24th July | Sandwiched Out |
| 17th July | The Show Ain't Over 'Til the Fat Lady's on Page 3 |
| 26th June | Love All at Wimbledon |
| 16th June | Miller Puts the Heat on Tennant |
| 27th May | Booze Banned on Buses |
| 20th May | Same Again? |
| 23rd April | By George |
| 11th April | Back to the 80s |
| 28th March | How do You Solve A Problem Like Medea? |
| 20th March | Flight Fantastic |
| 20th February | Dark, Satanic Turnmills |
| 6th February | A Diamond in the Drink |
| 21st January | People Wanted for Plinth |
| 14th January | Boo! Hiss! |
2007
2006
2005
2004
| 30th December | Party Pooper |
| 23rd December | The Second Battle of Trafalgar |
| 16th December | Sadie's Year |
| 28th November | Ripper-Watch |
| 21st November | Kinky Boots |
| 14th November | Smoked out |
| 22nd October | Yuppie Meal |
| 15th October | Fines of Fury |
| 8th October | No Twist in the Turner |
| 17th September | Battleships, bloodsports and Batman |
| 10th September | Clique Week |
| 3rd September | Return of the Bard |
| 20th August | Politics Takes Centre Stage |
| 13th August | Crisis in Theatreland |
| 6th August | Journey's End |
| 23rd July | Healing Waters |
| 16th July | Mandela Statue in Doubt |
| 9th July | From Art to Ashes |
| 2nd July | One Hurdle Nearer to Gold |
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