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Same old story?
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Henry Irving said:1
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GoldthorpesHeel said:Lewis Coaches said:
This is also a interesting read .
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Even in those days, Charlton has been about finding the right man and not backing him. I suppose exceptions are Curbs and possibly Lennie.0
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Yes. The Gliksteins reluctance to speculate to accumulate probably prevented us being the Arsenal south of the river. Instead The Valley remained about as basic a football stadium as is possible instead of becoming Highbury. Football as an industry was very different back then though. It was certainly a boat that Charlton Athletic had a ticket for but decided not to board.2
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ShootersHillGuru said:Yes. The Gliksteins reluctance to speculate to accumulate probably prevented us being the Arsenal south of the river. Instead The Valley remained about as basic a football stadium as is possible instead of becoming Highbury. Football as an industry was very different back then though. It was certainly a boat that Charlton Athletic had a ticket for but decided not to board.1
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Lordflashheart said:ShootersHillGuru said:Yes. The Gliksteins reluctance to speculate to accumulate probably prevented us being the Arsenal south of the river. Instead The Valley remained about as basic a football stadium as is possible instead of becoming Highbury. Football as an industry was very different back then though. It was certainly a boat that Charlton Athletic had a ticket for but decided not to board.1
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Lordflashheart said:ShootersHillGuru said:Yes. The Gliksteins reluctance to speculate to accumulate probably prevented us being the Arsenal south of the river. Instead The Valley remained about as basic a football stadium as is possible instead of becoming Highbury. Football as an industry was very different back then though. It was certainly a boat that Charlton Athletic had a ticket for but decided not to board.0
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years ago I posted on here that the schoolboy Bobby Moore was a Charlton fan, used to bring his bike through the Greenwich foot tunnel to watch us .. thing is you can never tell how (e.g.) Moore would have developed with us as opposed to with West Ham, IF he had signed for us as a youngster0
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Alan Mullery said in his biography that Glikstein wouldn't stump up the cash to buy Archie Gemmill about Jan/Feb time. Mullery felt Archie was the final piece in the jigsaw for promotion.0
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Phil said:Alan Mullery said in his biography that Glikstein wouldn't stump up the cash to buy Archie Gemmill about Jan/Feb time. Mullery felt Archie was the final piece in the jigsaw for promotion.0
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My dad always told the story that the main stand was due to be sold to Aldershot when the war intervened. I've never heard this anywhere else - Does anyone else know the story?0
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lawsojo said:My dad always told the story that the main stand was due to be sold to Aldershot when the war intervened. I've never heard this anywhere else - Does anyone else know the story?0
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The Aldershot connection is part of Charlton folklore but I doubt they were selling it in 1939. I think the origin of the story is that the temporary stand which was used until the permanent one was ready had come from Aldershot, where it had been used by the military.3
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ShootersHillGuru said:lawsojo said:My dad always told the story that the main stand was due to be sold to Aldershot when the war intervened. I've never heard this anywhere else - Does anyone else know the story?1
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JamesSeed said:Henry Irving said:Big William said:The legend was that the board asked Seed if he could guarantee prolonged division football if they signed him, he couldn't, so no deal. Apparently when WW2 started Seed was told "See, we would have wasted our money". Considering he played for another 20+ years, points to a certain lack of foresight. ..After reaching Div 1 (1937) JS asked Albert Glicksten about building a new covered stand with seating to accommodate the increasing crowds, but the Chairman said he’d only do it if Seed could guarantee three more seasons of first division football.If someone asks you that, you say “Yes!” I’m afraid he didn’t.There was also talk at one time of building a super stadium that could accommodate 200,000 fans, making it by far the biggest stadium in Britain.Of course transport links were always a problem. Most of the other London stadiums were and are served by tube trains as well as buses and, being more central, by black cabs too. Charlton would always struggle when the crowds were bigger, even in the days of the tram, but people were used to walking when necessary, back in the day.I’m not sure how we’ll cope when we return to the Premier League in 2033 and the crowds come flooding back. If only.1
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These posts are a reminder of what we are missing since the passing of VOTV . Great read - thanks and keep em coming1