London Fields

The latest report from the two unfortunates on football cities takes on London.   That’s a big task, given the number of clubs in the city.

Quite rightly, the author focuses not so much on the clubs but on the city itself, including its status as a city region and a global city and the way in which that affects football.  He concludes that football in London is in many respects a corporate led junket.

The latest report from the two unfortunates on football cities takes on London.   That’s a big task, given the number of clubs in the city.

Quite rightly, the author focuses not so much on the clubs but on the city itself, including its status as a city region and a global city and the way in which that affects football.  He concludes that football in London is in many respects a corporate led junket.

It inspired me to get down from the bookshelves a copy of a book by one of my favourite authors, Charlue Connelly, entitled London Fields: a Journey Through Football’s Metroland.  Connelly set out to find whether there was a football spirit unique to the metropolis and quickly concluded that there was no such thing.

A lot of the book is about the city’s non-league clubs who have to try and create an identity in an ill-defined surburban wasteland.   The description of the two man Wembley away ‘firm’ is hilarious.