Few of us live on the doorstep of our favourite team. We all have to get in the car, jump on the train or hop on a bus to get to a game these days. When I travel abroad to watch football these days I will always try to find a hotel close to the ground, enjoying that smug feeling of being in the bar 10 minutes after the game whilst other fans struggled to make their way home. Smug that is until the opposition fans steam in and trash it.
I once knew a Brentford fan who found his dream house in Braemer Road, literally a stone’s throw from his favourite seat in the main stand. After a season he was so fed up of fans throwing litter in his garden, scratching his car and generally behaving like football fans do he put in up for sale. It was bought by another Brentford fan. We are all mugs aren’t we when it comes to football? Stick a bloody club badge on a pile of crap and we will lap it up.
Back in early June I was sitting in a meeting when my phone vibrated. Nothing unusual there as it seems to go off every few minutes with another offer to buy Viagra or the news that I had been chosen by some wealthy widow to receive all of her cash. But it went off about a dozen times in thirty seconds. Such situations are like when the phone goes at home late at night. You immediately think “Who is dead”? I excused myself and saw 10 text messages from a variety of people.
“Can I stay at yours?”, “I will bring the beers”, “Bet you are happy about that” were three examples. I had no idea on what people were talking about until I consulted Auntie Twitter (Uncle Google is the font of all historical knowledge, Twitter the news now). The Hammers were coming to town. Unbelievable Jeff. My West Ham were playing in Copenhagen. And I could walk there.
R-E-S-U-L-T. I did a little jig of joy and I gloated to every one I could. Everyone in the office surely felt that this was the biggest game ever? Nope. Not even a flicker of interest. Even the FCK season ticket holders suggested it would be a dead duck. The game fell a week into their season and would simply be an opportunity to get some more practice under their belt.
“It will be like playing everyone else in the Superliga last season” Said one fan, referring to the ease with which FCK won the league last season, winning 25 of their 33 games. I couldn’t disagree at the time with the Hammers in disarray after being relegated with a whimper.
But time has moved on. West Ham have appointed Sam Allardyce and the job of trying to retain our Premier League status has started. The club immediately put its valuable assets up for sale. In fact, in another dreadful PR move they actually put them up for sale publically prior to the season end. But bids had been slow to come in. Cole was on the bring of signing for Stoke City, but the deal broke down last weekend and the striker immediately went on the charm offensive by saying he “was ready to fight to get the Hammers back in the Premier League”. Scott Parker had been touted all over the place by the press. The latest beaus had been Chelsea, interested in taking him back as cover for Michael Essien on a season-long loan. The situation on Robert Green less public. A rumoured interest from Bursaspor had come to nothing, with the Turks signing Scott Carson instead.
Last week we crossed the Alps and watched a young team, mixed with a few older squad players lose to Young Boys Berne. Two days later they lost again to FC Basel. So now was an opportunity to test themselves against a much stronger team in theory; a team who reached the last 16 in the Champions League last season, a fact borne out by the starting XI which featured Green, Parker and Noble – all players who if you believe the English press would not be starting the Championship season, well not at West Ham anyway.
Obviously, when in Copenhagen and watching FCK it is necessary to meet up with Ivar and Hans, and tonight was no different. After making sure Mick “Know it All” was pointed in the right direction of the £10 pints at Nyhavn we headed from some traditional Danish fayre - Stegt Flæsk og Persille Sovs and lashings of Carlsberg Special (note to fans in England this is NOT the same as Special Brew!).
FC Copenhagen 0 West Ham United 1 – Parken – Wednesday 20th July 2011
If I was to say that the biggest cheer of the first half was for an announcement that Ajax had beaten Brondby on the other side of the city you would get an idea that it wasn’t the best of halves. One of the issues that West Ham faced last season was the propensity Avram Grant had to “tinker” with a team. Not when we lost (well, OK he did when we lost) but also when we eventually won a game. One massive stand out problem was the defence.
The Hammers started with Parker, Noble AND Nolan in the middle of the park. That was obviously never going to work with two players often fighting for the same ball in the opening exchanges. And talking of fighting, there was good old Boa Morte, tussling at one point with a paper bag that had blown onto the pitch.
West Ham did create the opening chance which Boa Morte fired straight at the keeper, which was a darn sight closer than Nolan’s effort – West Ham’s only other effort in the first half that sailed into the empty top-tier behind the goal.
The second half saw FCK start the stronger and they had the ball in the net on 52 minutes but a linesman flag denied them a goal. Five minutes later Allardyce made some changes to try to inject some pace into the lacklustre Hammers display. On came Sears, Brown and O’Brien for Collison, Parker and Nolan.
Fifteen minutes later and the referee again was shattering the dreams of the FCK fans. Boffin made a great save bravely diving at the feet of the oncoming FCK forward who made contact, the ball spilt loose and was put in the net. It was all Copenhagen at this stage. Another chance went begging a few minutes later when a great move saw the ball find Nordstrand in one of those Carlos Alberto moments from the 1970 World Cup Final. The Brazilian gave us all a lesson by keeping his head down and powering through the ball. Alas the Dane did nothing of the sort and the ball sales over.
After the game I went down and spoke with Jack Collison. Almost a year ago we interviewed him as he started his rehabilitation from his knee injury. Now he was back playing again and looking forward to the start of the season, especially as first up was Cardiff City, the team followed by the majority of his family. I then managed to grab a word or two with Big Sam. Click Sam interview to hear what he had to say.
So a good evenings work all round. As the team departed back to their hotel, ready for their flight back to the UK I was able to walk home, enjoying the sights and sounds of the city In My “Back Yard”.
More photos from the game can be found on our Flickr feed here.