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Terrace chants were like Nuremberg

Veteran football writer Brian Glanville has seen many changes in the game.

February 11, 2010 10:20
Glory days: Arsenal parade the cup through North London in 1971

BySimon Round, Simon Round

3 min read

Arsenal has played a big part in Brian Glanville’s life. They were the team his father supported, they were the first club side he ever watched and, as a child in the 1930s and ’40s, he was obsessed by the team, particularly their star player Eddie Hapgood, to whom he wrote regular fan letters.

Glanville, arguably Britain’s greatest football writer, has written two histories of the club — the latest of which, The Real Arsenal, was published at the end of last year. But he is not an Arsenal supporter. “I stopped being a fan in 1953. I decided that it was a childish thing. Many other journalists have retained their allegiances but I didn’t think it was right. I still have soft spot for them though.”

Glanville saw his first Arsenal game as a child in 1942, ironically at White Hart Lane, home of their arch-rivals Tottenham Hotspur as Highbury was shut during the War.

Although he finds it hard to compare decades, Glanville feels that Arsenal’s finest era has been under present manager, Arsene Wenger. “That team with Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp was the best I have ever seen,” he says.