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Barry Frankfurt

By

Barry Frankfurt,

Barry Frankfurt

Opinion

Spurs, you'll always be Lilywhites

September 25, 2013 09:00
2 min read

As a Panini-sticker-collecting kid, the albums provided a lesson in football trivia that has stayed with me to this day. The stadium names, the players’ places of birth and the nicknames for every club, are etched in my memory.

My beloved Arsenal are of course the Gunners. Everton will always be the Toffeemen. United are the Red Devils and Tottenham Hotspur the Lilywhites — but never the Yids.

Some of my Jewish friends supported Spurs, others Arsenal. In the 80s, we had David Dein, they had Irving Scholar. Neither club was Jewish. Both were Jew-ish. In fact, as the Jewish Museum’s upcoming Four Four Jew exhibition highlights, Arsenal were nearly a decade ahead of their North London rivals in using the match-day programme to wish Jewish fans a Happy New Year at Rosh Hashanah. One-nil to the Arsenal (again), but this isn’t the time or place for point scoring.

The latest furore over Spurs fans calling themselves the “Yid Army” has not only touched these pages but reached Downing Street and the media here and across the world. As an Arsenal fan — a statement that will no doubt tint what follows in the eyes of the myopic and tribal —it is clear. Spurs fans are right. As they so triumphantly sang at home to Norwich earlier this month, they can sing what they want.