Local football derbies, Manchester City, United and Spurs- West Ham
It hardly seems like it but local football derbies in Britain are as old as time itself. They date back to a time when Queen Victoria reigned supreme over her dearly beloved UK and the Commonwealth. Some have now been lost to memory because only photographic evidence remains and the British tabloids have perpetuated their images and vivid action shots. They have now become embedded in football's soul and bloodstream.
Yesterday, Manchester United beat their noisy local neighbours City with a 2-0 win that could well prove to be decisive in those final 16 or 17 matches before the season's end. United, still struggling to replicate the extraordinary years of Sir Alex Ferguson, found both their balance, focus and a thrilling rapport with each other that hasn't been seen for a number of seasons now. Reuben Amorim has gone and United are rather like a stalling steam locomotive train who have just hit upon a mini renaissance and are quite happy to be where they are in the here and present.
Interim coach Michael Carrick, with those dulcet Wallsend Geordie tones nicely oiled, stands on the deck of the great ship that is Manchester United and, yesterday, for a while at least, it felt good to be in the groove. Carrick looks as though he's thoroughly enjoying himself even if the gig is a part time one and United are still in transition, waiting patiently for the right moment to set sail on another voyage of discovery.
So, for the first time in what must now seem ages, United were reminiscent of the team who once conquered Europe, won the Champions League with an almost effortless nonchalance, a team joined and fused together rather like electrical wiring. There was a unity and collective ethos about United that some at the Streford End at Old Trafford must have forgotten all about. But victory, of course, sweetened by the flavour of local bragging rights, couldn't have come at a better time for United and Manchester City were numbed, dulled and reduced to wandering souls who had lost their way and needed some friendly guidance.
And then we realised where we were. For well over 100 years and much further back in time, Manchester City and Manchester United have locked horns with each other like feuding stags determined to inflict as much as damage on each other as possible. At Old Trafford, we saw the latest instalment of the local derby that is absolutely definitive in the eyes of those who have been watching this fiery contest for so many years. It has been football at its most argumentative, nasty at times, tasty on others, essentially confrontational, bittersweet on some occasions, heart breaking on others but so often personal that you would think they couldn't stand the sight of each other.
When Manchester United were known as Newton Heath and Billy Meredith was scoring goals for fun at United, even then there was a pathological hatred and vicious antagonism between them that has endured for countless decades. In Victorian times, the city of Manchester was dominated by the ship canal where barges and boats of every conceivable description would glide up and down the canal sedately and the supporters of City and United would cross bridges before a football match would break out. And none of a nervous disposition would ever dare to come between them.
City of course for their part, played at Maine Road and even kindly allowed their neighbours United to use their ground after Old Trafford had been bombed to smithereens during the Second World War. But you can imagine them, teenage boys with flat caps, neat and tight waistcoats and the colours of red, white and blue clashing on the terraces. Scarves, rattles and rosettes were still a prominent feature of football's weekly conflicts. Nobody questioned their existence for this was the working class game.
But local derbies are full of spice and rich rivalry, matches with that very distinct air of neighbourly parochialism, communities fiercely divided on the day by two football teams who were probably just a terraced home from each other. During the week they must have shared a factory floor and the metallic grind of iron and steel could probably be heard on the other side of the Pennines. But come Saturday afternoon at 3pm they were sworn enemies, ready to pick up a bayonet, flintlock and blunderbuss and fire off their footballing artillery.
And then there was that famous Manchester derby when United's world fell apart almost tragically but without any hint of the Greek about it. In 1974, Manchester United experienced the most wretched and horrendous season since the club was first formed. For most of that season, things went from bad to worse to rock bottom. United dropped into the lower half of the old First Division and languished there like a rusting and neglected building that hadn't seen a lick of paint for at least 70 years. What followed next was a disastrous decline into the world of relegation and the old Second Division.
On the final day of that forgettable season for United, the now late and much missed Denis Law just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. In the middle of an emotional minefield, Law was now wearing the light blue of Manchester City rather than the Red Devils shirt of United where the Scotsman had spent some of his most fabled and legendary years. It was goal- less for ages and then it happened. It was like a flash of lightning or a clap of thunder.
City, breaking with some speed and regularity, kept pressing United back while United just flapped and staggered around like a drunken sailor at sea for whom buoyancy had now proved impossible. Law, loitering with intent on the edge of the six yard penalty area and with his back to goal, almost apologetically back heeled Manchester City's winning goal and looked totally ashamed of himself. It was never meant to happen like that but United were down and out and heading for the old Second Division.
Meanwhile, back in London and the capital city, there was another local derby and one that defies any kind of geographical understanding. Spurs have always been based in North London while West Ham are undoubtedly situated in East London. For reasons that have never really become abundantly clear, Spurs and West Ham just don't get on with each other. In fact they'd probably challenge each other to a heavyweight boxing match given half the chance. There is an almost unspoken malice and red blooded antipathy between the two of them.
Yesterday Spurs, drifting through the season and bobbing precariously around the lower half of the Premier League, will certainly not be relegated. But after their 2-1 defeat at home to local neighbours West Ham, a vast majority of Spurs were loudly booing their team for ages before manager Thomas Frank finally emerged for the media, not exactly a broken man but wondering whether Denmark would still throw a warm homecoming reception should he be sacked any time shortly. Spurs fans have reached the end of their tether, disgusted at the team's miserable malaise and slump into the land of nowhere.
And yet West Ham themselves are still deeply troubled, a team not only fighting for survival in the Premier League but well and truly up to their neck in the murky waters of a relegation crisis. Simply put, West Ham have been the victims of some of the shoddiest acts of mismanagement and after two quick fire changes of manager following the exit of Julen Lopetegui and Graham Potter, the East London club are looking for any light at the end of the tunnel.
After a 10 match winless run, the Hammers are going through the mill. But at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium yesterday afternoon, West Ham had the rub of the green and the tea leaves looked very healthy. At long last something clicked and all the attacking mechanisms were functioning. Crysencio Summerville, the Dutch winger who looked as though he'd been frozen out of the team by Mohammad Kudus, who then left for Spurs, picked up the ball after a nimble footed exchange of passes, cutting inside his defender before driving a beautifully accurate shot that beat Spurs keeper Guglielmo Vicario.
Spurs were, by their own admission, both poor and dysfunctional, huffing and puffing in the most haphazard fashion and never really looking like a goal was within their capabilities. But when captain Christian Romero equalised for Spurs, it must have felt a lifeboat had been thrown in their direction. In the 93rd minute though, an Olly Scarles corner for West Ham dropped invitingly into a bus queue of players before Callum Wilson nudged the ball over the line for a crucial winning goal for West Ham.
And yet you can still see those early days of West Ham- Spurs battles over the years. Over on the industrial docklands and tobacco warehouses of London's East End docklands, West Ham would welcome visitors to the old Upton Park. Spurs fans would jump onto a trolley bus, tram or horse drawn landau if the money was good and then traipse down the Seven Sisters Road before disembarking at White Hart Lane, seething with anticipation
Then the newspaper sellers doing a roaring trade with the Star, Evening News and the still wonderful Standard, would hand out their final programmes, Peaky Blinders caps firmly fixed to their head. But the London derby between Spurs and West Ham would still baffle the neutral. Spurs came into this world when a group of schoolboys would gather under street lights and discuss the fortunes of their local football team while the iron foundries were hammering out their story at West Ham.
West Ham played at the Boleyn Ground and the historical connection with royalty sounds as if dear Ann would probably have been very flattered had she known that her name would be employed in footballing circles several centuries later. Local football derbies will never lose their enduring appeal and yesterday may well have proved the point. Manchester and London were on the same territory once again and how football was so delighted to be part of the local derby scenario.