A shot in time: 1972 image from clash between Tottenham and Manchester United at the old White Hart Lane shows what it means to be a fan
- Black and white snapshot of action between Tottenham v Manchester United
- The 1972 photograph is an image which captures what it means to be a fanĀ
- White Hart Lane tea ladies chat during match as transfixed fans watch the game
Stare at this photograph long enough and what emerges from behind the action of a Tottenham v Manchester United match from 1972 ā where the White Hart Lane tea ladies chat as the match goes on ā is face upon face of transfixed fans, their attention solely on the action.
These are supporters ā men, women, girls, boys ā with their eyes on the ball. They are straining to see its destination. They are lost in the music of the game. It is an image that captures what it means to be a fan.
That term āfanā stems from āfanaticā, a derivation that makes sense when you hear of 21 Gateshead supporters travelling 774 miles to watch their non-League team play Torquay on a Tuesday night in December.
This picture taken at White Hart Lane evokes memories of what it means to be a football fanĀ
This sort of dedication could be labelled āsavage enthusiasmā, which happens to be the title of a new book by Paul Brown on the history of football fans. Brown takes his title from a report in the Pall Mall Gazette of the 1888 FA Cup final between West Bromwich Albion and Preston North End at the Kennington Oval in London.
There were 20,000 there, up from 2,000 in the previous decade, as footballās popularity mushroomed. The report referred to interest in the result far beyond Kennington ā āin dozens of murky towns in Lancashire, Yorkshire and the Midlands, to say nothing of Scotlandā. By 1901 there would be more than 110,000 for the Tottenham v Sheffield United final at Crystal Palace.
Brown explains that legislation aided the boom with 19th century Factory Acts shortening working hours and curtailing Saturday afternoon labour.Ā In just 20 years, football had become an essential part of the British way of life. āFor several months of the year, football is the chief, and in some circles the only, topic of conversation,ā the Pall Mall Gazette added.
By 1968 Arthur Hopcraft was able to write in his seminal book, The Football Man, these opening lines: āThe point about football in Britain is that it is not just a sport people take to, like cricket or tennis or running long distances. It is inherent in the people.
āIt is built into the urban psyche, as much a common experience to our children as are uncles and school. It is not a phenomenon; it is an everyday matter.ā
Those gathered at White Hart Lane in 1972 will have understood these sentiments. They would also understand the views of Daniel Gray, a Middlesbrough fan, who last year wrote, Saturday, 3pm: 50 Eternal Delights of Modern Football. Gray has a chapter called āBelongingā. Here he says of being a fan: āIt brings contentedness unexpectedly. There I am, waiting for a bus, when it swarms over me. I become aware that, no matter what happens in the many departments of life, I belong.ā
Grayās chapter 46 concerns āThe hectic Christmas scheduleā in which he writes: āFootball just feels right at this time of the year, in the same way that emailing or eating salad doesnāt.ā
That Christmas schedule is upon us, and attendances will climb. Geography affects some clubs more than others, with Plymouth Argyle fans asked to travel 230 miles each way to Milton Keynes on Boxing Day followed by a 640-mile round trip to Blackpool four days later.
āAway fans are vital in bringing colour and noise to our football stadiums,ā said the Football Supportersā Foundation, āand clubs and sponsors can and should do more in making football more affordable... They shouldnāt take away fans for granted.ā
As the great Celtic manager Jock Stein once said: āWithout fans who pay at the turnstile, football is nothing. Sometimes we are inclined to forget that.ā
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