Mad for it: From Blackpool to Barcelona: Football’s Greatest Rivalries. Andy Mitten. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Andy Mitten
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Спорт, фитнес
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007360970
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does, ancient maritime rivalries get out of hand…

      Portsmouth fan Steve Woodhead grimaces at the map hanging in the hallway of his home, little more than a decent defensive punt from Fratton Park. Dated 1829, it shows the town and surrounding area. In a spidery, old-world hand are scrawled the following words: County of Southampton. ‘I sent off for that,’ says Woodhead contemptuously, as if he’s been palmed off with something contravening the Trade Descriptions Act. ‘I only keep it because it matches the wallpaper.’

      It may be a throwaway remark, but the devil is in the detail. Scratch the surface and this snapshot illuminates a deep-seated set of local grievances, existing not only geographically, but on cultural, social, and economic grounds. For many Portsmouth fans, the insularity resulting from the city’s island status and their perception of a raw deal from Hampshire down the centuries have driven a wedge between themselves and neighbouring Southampton – or ‘skates’ and ‘scummers’, to give them their disrespective sobriquets.

      Skate, slang for sailor, supposedly has its roots in the fevered imaginings of how naval types might take the concept of fisherman’s friend to the nth degree as they whiled away lonely months at sea. Slightly less far-fetched is the derivation of the term Scummers. While details may be sketchy, the most popular version centres on a dock strike across the two cities by workers from the same firm. As the Portsmouth faction stuck to its guns, the ‘Southampton Company Union men’ swallowed their pride and went back to work – one acronym later and their brothers in arms had become the Scum. However fishy these tales, the schism between these old maritime towns – one Royal Navy, the other merchant – just seventeen miles apart, has become, for Pompey fans in particular, a chasm when it comes to football.

      In the Artillery Arms, favoured watering hole for many of Portsmouth’s 600-strong Internet supporters’ group, the Pompey Anorak Brigade, Woodhead, a founding editor of the now-defunct fanzine Frattonise, takes a deep breath and lets me have it with both barrels. ‘The rest of Hampshire repudiates Portsmouth,’ he says. ‘Southampton might as well be the county town, even though it’s officially Winchester. The rivalry predates football by a couple of hundred years. Portsmouth has always been subsidiary to Southampton – until 1835, they owned the docks – and there’s always been that thing of the navy having bred Portsmouth. The rise of the town from a collection of villages was at odds with the tenor of the rest of the area.’

      Woodhead believes the city’s history of ‘breeding people for war – with the blessing of the Crown for the most part’ is almost woven into the DNA of anyone born on Portsea Island. Its status as an island club makes Pompey unique in the English game. He admits to being simultaneously ‘proud and horrified’ of the more vociferous side of Portsmouth’s resolutely working-class support, and he’s not alone.

      ‘Aesthetically, there’s not much to the place. I wish it were more cultural. I can’t stress that insularity and tribalism enough. But there’s affection, big-arsed shaven-headed blokes will cuddle you. It’s cheerful and violent. It’s the end of the line – us against the world, out on our own little limb. It’s a Portsmouth attitude. You trust your family, the people you went to school with and grew up with in your own little area, and no one else. There are a lot of parallels with the East End.’

      Attempts are being made to gentrify the area. On the seafront, the Gunwharf Quays development has a cinema multiplex, retail outlets, bars and restaurants galore – to be capped off by the £8 million Spinnaker Tower project. But for all the facelifts, the inescapable feeling is of a city with a distinct edge. Rough-and-ready Paulsgrove, to which many Pomponians moved following the huge swathe of postwar slum clearance, made the headlines in August 2000 for the residents’ week-long protest against ‘paedophils’ (sic) in the wake of the Sarah Payne name-and-shame campaign in the News of the World.

      Crime writer Graham Hurley is a former producer of TV’s The Big Match, a resident of Portsmouth since 1977, who worked in Southampton for twenty years. The hero of his books, DI Joe Faraday, is based at Fratton nick. Hurley describes Portsmouth as ‘a gift’ to the novelist, a diamond in the rough. ‘Southampton is much less distinctive,’ he says. ‘It’s wealthier and has, by and large, attracted a better quality of business. Portsmouth’s lack of wealth has led to a particular kind of culture – it has no side. It doesn’t matter what you do, if you’re a brain surgeon, judge, novelist. People are not impressed. You’re judged on what you are, and I think that’s increasingly rare.’

      Pride is not peculiar to the eastern end of the M27, however, as Nick Illingsworth, editor of Southampton fanzine The Ugly Inside, explains. ‘Southampton has had its bad years. The city was built on the shipping industry, and because of that it has a very cosmopolitan feel. But it went into steep decline in the 1970s as the great liners slumped. Throughout the ’80s, there was desolation, but the spirit of Southampton shone through, a spirit born in the days after the Titanic went down with the loss of so many local lives, and cemented in the Blitz as the town was flattened. That spirit resurfaced in the 1990s. We have a very open outlook on life. We don’t go for the insular mentality of our neighbours, but we are fiercely loyal and willing to stand up and be counted.’

      Dave King, the deputy editor of the Southampton-based Southern Daily Echo and one-time sports editor of the Portsmouth News, recalls his arrival on the south coast. ‘I was shocked when I came down here, hearing about fans with such vitriol for each other that they claim they wouldn’t even visit the other’s city. That’s astonishing compared to places like Nottingham and Merseyside, where family members support both teams. You’d be hard-pushed to find that here. Depending on which side of the River Hamble you live, you’re Saints or Pompey.’

      Martin Hopkins, match commentator for Portsmouth radio station, The Quay, laughs at the ridiculousness of it all, but cheerfully admits boycotting anything Southampton-based. ‘I wouldn’t dream of buying screwdrivers from Draper Tools, Sanderson Paints, or anything from their sponsors.’ He can still recall his first visit to the training ground in the early-1990s. ‘Mark Chamberlain turned up without a jacket. It got progressively colder, so he went to his car to get an extra layer. He came back wearing a Southampton training top. He’d been at their academy. When Alan Knight and Andy Awford saw it, they tried to wrestle him out of the car park. They were only half-joking.’

      Hopkins’ colleague, Sam Matterface, has been equally struck by the passion and is now a committed fan. ‘You don’t have any choice. I’d liken it to the Mafia. It takes a while to get in, but once you’re in you can’t get out. It’s a working-class town and football’s a working-class game. Look at Southampton and its, “When are we going to Cowes?” Portsmouth’s built on its naval base and, “We’re off to sail the world in a five-tonne warship”, Southampton’s about yachting.’

      Across the Solent, Nick Illingsworth finds the continual mithering about the weight of history not only a comparatively recent refrain, but a theory that doesn’t hold water. ‘I didn’t really come across it, even at school,’ he says. ‘It was only when we went down to the Second Division in 1974 that it started, and even then it seemed to be more of a one-way thing – a kind of siege mentality. After years of that, Saints fans started to hate Pompey back.

      ‘The navy divide and the working-class fighting myth seems to be a popular way of looking at it, but I don’t really buy into that. Take some of the violent cities in England – Manchester or Birmingham. No one’s gone to war en masse from there, apart from on each other. I think the analogy can be used in part, but I don’t think it’s the root cause. Pompey fans, or at least the more violent element, would like to glorify it, but that’s a theory I’ve only heard in the last year or so.’

      He continues: ‘In general Saints fans don’t hate Pompey as much as Pompey hate Saints. You could walk down the street in Southampton with a Pompey shirt on and no one would take any notice. But just try wearing a Saints shirt in Portsmouth! You get the feeling Pompey consider themselves to be the club with the history – “We’ve won the title, you haven’t, you’re nothing”. Saints fans would say, “Fair enough, but we’ve been above you for forty years and you’re showing us no respect”, and so it’s gradually built up. And the fact that it’s