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ByBernard Josephs, Bernard Josephs

Opinion

This express threatens the Orient

January 31, 2011 12:50
2 min read

It is crisis time at Leyton Orient FC (the Os). Chairman Barry Hearn has spelt it out. If West Ham or Tottenham Hotspur take over the Olympic Stadium in Stratford - situated barely a training run from the Os' Brisbane Road ground - grave times lie ahead. His remarks bring back memories of the 1950s and '60s, when the club was forced to beg fans to throw loose change into buckets so that the players could be paid.

Hearn has brought financial stability to the Orient, building three new stands and converting the renamed Matchroom Stadium into an all-seater ground. But now, with the Tottenham v West Ham financial juggernaut moving in on the Olympic stadium, the Brisbane Road club - where average gates hover around the 4,000 mark - faces the prospect of having Premiership football on its doorstep and this threatens its existence.

For a section of East London's soccer-loving Jewish community, including many who have moved away but whose hearts remain there, the demise of Orient would be a sad loss. For me, an Orient supporter for more than 50 years, it would be a catastrophe.

The Os have always been a heimishe club. Even the legions of Jewish fans who support Arsenal, Spurs and West Ham admit to keeping an eye on their results. My son for instance, who has sadly become a "gooner", never fails to call me to commiserate or celebrate the latest doings in E10. He even allows his son to wear "I Love Orient" pyjamas.