Something for Arsenal fans...

Soldato
Joined
5 Jul 2003
Posts
16,206
Location
Atlanta, USA
Found this on UEFA.com and thought some of you Arsenal fans might be interested. :)



--------------------------------


Europe bids Highbury adieu
413221_BIGLANDSCAPE.jpg

John Radford celebrates levelling the aggregate score in the 1970 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup final at Highbury

Maybe it is appropriate that Arsenal FC's last European game at Highbury will be a UEFA Champions League semi-final, perhaps the biggest match any club could play at home. Reaching this round may be a new experience for Arsenal, but the famous stadium in north London is no stranger to big occasions, and not just those of a footballing nature.

Controversial move
Even the location of the Arsenal Stadium, as Highbury is officially called, made headlines. As their name at the time of their 1913 move - Woolwich Arsenal FC - attests, the club were originally based south of the Thames, but switched to a more populous area. This did not make them popular with new neighbours Tottenham Hotspur FC, especially when Arsenal were given Spurs' place in the first division after the end of World War I.

Art Deco
The stadium, initially designed by football specialist Archibald Leitch, was transformed in the 1930s, an era when the team built by Herbert Chapman were winning a hat-trick of league titles and supplying seven players to an England side that beat world champions Italy 3-2 in 1934 at Highbury. Two Art Deco stands were erected, so magnificent that planning laws state their facades must remain when the stadium is replaced by housing this summer. Even the local tube station was renamed from Gillespie Road to Arsenal, though the original title remains in the brickwork on the platform.

Broadcasting firsts
Before the worldwide televised events that matches like Arsenal against Villarreal CF have become, Highbury was at the forefront of broadcasting. In January 1927 a match between Arsenal and Sheffield United FC was the first league match to be transmitted on BBC radio, and the first team and reserves met ten years later in the earliest televised football game anywhere in the world. In 1939 Highbury broke into the movies with the Arsenal Stadium Mystery, a murder suspense that is still considered one of the few football films of any merit.

European debut
After closing for the war, when the North Bank terrace was destroyed, Highbury was soon a sporting arena once again, and on 22 October 1963 competitive European football came to the stadium for the first time with the visit of Denmark's Staevnet in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. The away team won 3-2, but nine years later Norwegian side Stromsgodset IF were defeated 4-0 in Highbury's European Champions Clubs' Cup debut. Meanwhile, 1966 may have seen a famous world title encounter in another London stadium, but Highbury had one of its own - the bout between Mohammed Ali and British hero Henry Cooper for the heavyweight crown, two years after their famed non-title fight at Wembley. A cut to Cooper's eye ended the rematch after six rounds.

Fairs Cup success
International success for Arsenal was achieved at Highbury four years later, as they lifted the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. The club had not won any silverware for 17 years, but despite starting the second leg of the final 3-1 down to RSC Anderlecht, Eddie Kelly, John Radford and Ray Kennedy scored the goals that clinched the cup and set the scene for the domestic double - only the fourth in English history - the following year.

'1-0 to the Arsenal'
Arsenal now set about attempting to add to their European honours, and three UEFA Cup Winners' Cup semi-finals were played at Highbury, all ending happily for the Gunners. The first was in 1980, when Juventus came to town for the opening leg, and their striker Roberto Bettega scored a retaken penalty but then put through his own goal and Arsenal won the return 1-0. In 1994 Paris Saint-Germain FC visited and, as a popular Highbury song of the time put it, the game ended "1-0 to the Arsenal" - as did the final against Parma AC. Twelve months on a thriller against UC Sampdoria ended 3-2. Arsenal won the second leg in Genoa on penalties, but lost the final as they did in 1980.

European Cup nights
As befits Arsenal's recent lofty status under Arsène Wenger, UEFA Champions League fixtures have been Highbury staples in recent years, at least after a brief experiment in the 1990s when European matches were moved to Wembley. Crowds were bigger, but results disastrous. However, despite winning English doubles in 1998 and 2002, and going through the 2003/04 Premiership season unbeaten, a UEFA Champions League run past the last eight still eluded them.

Farewell
Patrick Vieira was a regular in Wenger's sides, but in the penultimate European tie at Highbury the midfielder was a visitor with Juve. Cesc Fabregas and Thierry Henry - a Highbury hero to rank with the likes of Cliff Bastin, Charlie George and Tony Adams - ensured a night of raucous celebrations for the home team against nine-man Juventus, and ultimately earned a long-awaited European Cup semi-final. After Villarreal, only two competitive Highbury games remain - against, appropriately, Tottenham, and then Wigan Athletic FC on 7 May. The nearby new stadium will boast 21,500 more seats. It will be many decades before it holds as many memories.


Original Article

Enjoy! :)
 
I'm not an Arsenal fan but Highbury has always been one of my favourite grounds. I love the Art Deco look and I seem to remember them being the first to get a huge screen in one corner of the ground.
 
FishFluff said:
I'm not an Arsenal fan but Highbury has always been one of my favourite grounds. I love the Art Deco look and I seem to remember them being the first to get a huge screen in one corner of the ground.

The Art Deco look is amazing, I was admiring it only the other day, it does need a lick of paint though! IIRC we were the first side to get the TV's, the Jumbotrons! You can actually buy them when they auction off parts of the stadium! We should also be the first side in Europe to use HDTV :)

Gonna miss the place, but can't wait to go to Ashburton.
 
Ashburton does look pretty good.
Reminds me of Juves ground the lower levels of seating do. :p

I might see if i can get some tickets to a game sometime next season.
 
Big Kev said:
Nice post mate and although I'm looking forward to Ashburton Grove, it's going to be a real choker at the Wigan game. :(

Indeed, but the money has come out of my account so I have a ticket :D Reckon I might go to Bergkamp's testimonial so I can see it, you?

Clipsey said:
How do you mean - i.e what sense? :confused:

Sorry if its an obvious answer

The TV screens will be a HDTV, the first club side to use them. It will be the huge screens that show the replays during the games, the equivalent to the current jumbotrons
 
Gooner14 said:
Well as long as the PA is better I'll be happy :)

True, I can never understand what Wenger or any guests are saying.

Regarding the hdtv, I think all the tvs around the ground will be showing hdtv.
http://www.arsenal.com/article.asp?thisNav=&article=379046

The quality of pre and post match entertainment at Arsenal's new stadium will encourage supporters to extend their Emirates Stadium experience. The Club have invested in a network of 439 Sony LCD screens, which will be spread evenly around the stadium, and feature an array of viewing opportunities for supporters. The aim is to provide a mix of football action, analysis and behind the scenes content that will build the atmosphere before the match and provide all the up to the minute news. We will also bring wider entertainment exclusives and features.

For the post match period, the Club are working with Sony and our production company to deliver a comprehensive post match review. This will feature analysis and reaction from players and pundits, as well as covering other matches in the Premiership - much of this content will not be available through any other channel. Where relevant we will also show live Premiership games and sporting events through the screen network. There will also be competitions and prize draws to win unique merchandise, memorabilia and prizes. And with the Club’s caterer and brewing partners, there will also value added promotions that will make it attractive to stay at Emirates Stadium rather than go anywhere else.
 
There's two things I love about Highbury. First is just its overall uniqueness and the way no other stadium out there is anything like it. The second is the way it just seamlessly fits in to a housing block like it's not even there. I remember being so suprised when I originally found out where Highbury actually was, because it really is so tucked away. When you walk down Highbury Road straight out of the tube, it's house, house, house, house, entrance to West stand, house, house, house. I dunno why, but I just think there's something ace about that.

Can't wait for the new stadium (looks better every time I see it!), but Highbury will definitely be missed. :)
 
Back
Top Bottom