WSC Logo



SEARCH  

Advanced search

dig
ROB

Weekly Howl

A mixture of comment, fact and captivating trivia via email

Sign up

Follow WSC

 twitter

NEWSFEEDS

sstore

 

HOME arrow WSC DAILY arrow September 2008 arrow Unpopularity contest
Unpopularity contest

ImageMonday 15 September ~

West Ham’s Icelandic owners have been criticised for the player sales that prompted the resignation of manager Alan Curbishley. Three years ago Hammers fans were demanding a change of ownership after a series of controversial transfers, as Darron Kirkby reported in WSC 223 (July 2005)

West Ham’s promotion killed off supporters’ hopes that somebody would buy chairman Terence Brown’s 38 per cent share. Despite his low profile, Brown has become one of the least popular chairmen in football during his 12 years in charge. The atmosphere at the Boleyn Ground has been poisonous since relegation two years ago with the crowd all too eager to barrack either Brown or manager Alan Pardew when things go wrong. The latter’s insistence on playing people out of position and his questionable tactics have even led to the crowd singing “We are the West Ham claret and blue army”, omitting his name.

The Brown Out campaign culminated in April, when 1,500 supporters gathered in the main stand after a 3-0 victory over Coventry to chant for 45 minutes for his resignation. It was inevitable that the fans’ unrest would lead to takeover speculation. The first consortium linked with a potential buyout was fronted by popular ex-Hammer Tony Cottee. When the story broke in March, Cottee, who was reportedly being backed by a group of West Ham-supporting businessmen, was quick to say that he didn’t want to undermine the stuttering promotion bid. But the media bandwagon swung into action, and the fans were soon anticipating an old boys’ reunion, with Cottee as chairman, Iain Dowie as manager and Alvin Martin and Tony Gale joining the coaching staff. Although no official approach was made, Cottee was sacked as a matchday host and columnist in the club magazine.

Next to have their hat thrown into the ring were Birmingham City owner David Sullivan, who lives in the West Ham heartland of Chigwell, and ex-bookmaker and Hammers fan Michael Tabor. There was also speculation that Sullivan’s co-owners at Birmingham, the East End-born Gold brothers, were looking to invest in their favourite team. A surreal note was sounded at the end of May when it was reported that the club was being targeted by the “Roman Abramovich of Iran”, oil tycoon Kia Joorabchian, who apparently studied at a college in Mile End. Offers were set to materialise from one quarter or another if the club had failed in the play-offs. And then Bobby Zamora popped up and ruined everything.

When they were relegated in May 2003, the Hammers were the 17th-largest club in Europe in terms of income. In June this year, five ex-Hammers lined up for England against Columbia – it would have been seven had Rio Ferdinand and Frank Lampard been on the tour. It is accepted that relegated teams have to make savings. But no other club has felt compelled to launch into a fire sale of such proportions. Since Ferdinand left for Leeds in November 2000, the departures of Lampard, Joe Cole, Glen Johnson, Jermain Defoe, Fredi Kanoute, Michael Carrick, Trevor Sinclair and David James have brought in almost £60 million. Despite having earned more than £30m from the sale of Lampard and Ferdinand (and spent little of the proceeds), and with average crowds of more than 30,000, the club claimed debts of £48m when it was relegated. The redevelopment of the ground was obviously expensive, but other clubs have had to fund new stadiums. Even after the sale of big earners such as Paolo di Canio and Lee Bowyer, the debts are still about £25m.

In an attempt to appease supporters, Brown has recently admitted to some “catastrophic bloody cock-ups”. He added: “The biggest mistake we made was complacency. We didn’t dream we could go down.” Brown has assured fans that if the club are relegated again, players’ wages will be adjusted accordingly. Meanwhile, Pardew has been promised £20m to spend, although that includes signing-on fees and wages. But with several senior players having already left the club, including a couple on inflated Premiership contracts, the outlay by the end of July was negligible and had certainly not brought in the quality to keep West Ham in the top flight for more than a season.

Season ticket sales are on course to break the 20,000 mark for the first time. Although they won’t be admitting it in public, many of those fans won’t be too disappointed if the club is relegated this season. West Ham have been taking two steps back to take one step forward for far too long.

Share this article:
Delicious
Furl it!
Spurl
NewsVine
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Technorati
Mister.Wong
Comments (0)
Comment
You must be logged in to comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 

Today's most read WSC articles

Teenage anguish - USA MLS youth development   

Mike Woitalla   

WSC 145 Mar 99

Oldham Athletic Dowie, Wembley, Division Two   

Steve Ragg   

WSC 194 Apr 03

Major success? MLS's first season   

Mike Woitalla   

WSC 118 Dec 96

Amir Karic and Ulrich Le Pen Not worth the money?   

Jonathan Barnes   

WSC 221 Jul 05

Unpopularity contest West Ham and Terence Brown   

Darron Kirkby   

WSC 223 Sep 05

The domination game Praising Chelsea   

WSC   

WSC 217 Mar 05

Firm Favourites: Old Firm Sectarianism in Scotland   

Dianne Millen   

WSC 206 Apr 04

States of happiness 1999 women's World Cup   

Ethan Zindler   

WSC 151 Sep 99

Kenny Achampong Tricky midfielder who disappeared   

Tom Davies   

WSC 179 Jan 02

No love, no joy Tim Lovejoy’s rubbish autobiography   

Taylor Parkes   

WSC 250 Dec 07