Stamford Bridge Is Falling Down
‘Stamford Bridge Is Falling Down’ – Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign for a book about Chelsea’s decline from 1971-75 – ends Wed 10th July. ...
https://www.chelseadaft.org/2019/07/stamford-bridge-is-falling-down.html
‘Stamford Bridge Is
Falling Down’ – Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign for a book about Chelsea’s
decline from 1971-75 – ends Wed 10th July.
In May 1971 Chelsea were at a pinnacle. Twelve months after
winning the FA Cup, they had beaten the mighty Real Madrid in a replay to win
the European Cup-Winners’ Cup. A much admired squad mixed flair, hard work and
physicality. The club had glamour and ambition, the board having started
thinking about a magnificent redevelopment of Stamford Bridge. It was
generally assumed that the side, managed for forward-thinking coach Dave
Sexton, would challenge for honours in the years ahead.
The more research I did,
and the more people I spoke to, the more it became clear that the reasons for
the decline and near fall of the club in the early and mid-1970s were complex.
The 200+ competitive matches Chelsea played in the four tempestuous seasons
between 1971 and 1975 are covered, but the rationale of this book is to be much
more than reporting the displays of a team in decline. The redevelopment of
Stamford Bridge, which commenced in 1972, deprived manager Dave Sexton of the
cash required to rebuild his team. Star players like Alan Hudson and Peter
Osgood became disaffected, openly critical of the manager and, in the end,
mutinous.
I wrote the book as a Chelsea
supporter, but not one who regularly watched that side. I have been a Stamford
Bridge regular since 1976, but in the early 1970s had to content myself with a
few games a season. Objectivity is not always easy, especially when human
failings are demonstrated, but I have attempted to utilise evidence uncovered
rather than emotion aroused. A number of supporters from those days have shared
vivid reminiscences with me, though the bulk of the research involved working
through contemporary newspapers and magazines, as well as a host of relevant
books.
Crowdfunding is a means of financing a product, in this case a book, through the producer receiving advance pledges from individuals interested in purchasing it. Kickstarter is the most well-known and globally-recognised web platform for crowdfunding projects, and is being used to raise the necessary money to produce the ‘Deluxe’ hardback version. More info on Kickstarter here https://www.kickstarter.com/about?ref=footer .
Twitter:
@IfdBridge Any
questions to: tjrolls@hotmail.com
“This is a forensic chronicle that will add
wonderfully to our understanding of this period of Chelsea history”. Rick
Glanvill, official Chelsea historian
'Stamford Bridge Is Falling
Down' will hopefully not only interest Chelsea supporters who remember the
decline of the club in the early 1970s, but also younger fans keen to learn
more about a pivotal four years in the club’s history.
I am crowdfunding a hardback
version of the book, with 24 photographs, index and slip cover, as well as a
list of backers. Details on the crowdfunding process, and a link to the
Kickstarter crowdfunding page, at the end of this article. The £5,000 minimum
target has been reached, so the hardback will definitely be produced. The crowdfunding process ends next Wednesday
morning (10th July).
Four years later that side had been broken up,
Sexton had been sacked and, unbelievably, the team had been relegated. Worse,
after the East Stand had been rebuilt, the club finances were so parlous that
Chelsea FC was in real danger of going under.
How on earth did this happen? How could
a club seemingly so well-run get in such a mess? How could a squad that in
summer 1971 included the likes of Peter Bonetti, John Phillips, Ron Harris, Eddie
McCreadie, John Dempsey, David Webb, Marvin Hinton, Paddy Mulligan, John Boyle,
John Hollins, Alan Hudson, Charlie Cooke, Peter Houseman, Peter Osgood, Keith
Weller, Ian Hutchinson and Tommy Baldwin fall apart so spectacularly. The
purchase of the likes of Chris Garland, Steve Kember, Bill Garner and David Hay
could not stop the rot, nor could the emergence of youngsters like Gary Locke,
Mickey Droy, Ian Britton and Ray Wilkins.
This book explores the causes
of the decline in those four seasons, causes that are many and varied.
Incompetence, pig-headedness, arrogance, unprofessionalism, recklessness, bad
luck, bravado, irresponsibility, stupidity, hopeless football and poor
communication all played their part. Despite what were often the best of intentions,
the Chelsea board, their advisers, the players and the manager all bear varying
degrees of responsibility for the chaos that consumed and nearly destroyed the
club.
A series of problems, some
self-inflicted, were to manifest themselves in declining performances,
diminishing gates, disaffected players and, critically, over-ambitious and
grandiose stadium redevelopment plans as club finances crumbled. Much of this
was played out in the back, and occasionally front, pages of the national
press. In 1970 and 1971 Chelsea made headlines because of their football and
their trophies. Positive on-pitch headlines ebbed away as less than positive
on- and off-pitch headlines became more prevalent.
The team declined just when the
board needed it to succeed, to sparkle, to attract supporters. Instead, it
became caught up in a vicious downward spiral, a perfect storm of
under-achievement that culminated in relegation and near financial disaster.
The matches, the personalities, the decisions, the events, the divisions and
the fall-outs are all examined to identify exactly what went so wrong.
Crowdfunding is a means of financing a product, in this case a book, through the producer receiving advance pledges from individuals interested in purchasing it. Kickstarter is the most well-known and globally-recognised web platform for crowdfunding projects, and is being used to raise the necessary money to produce the ‘Deluxe’ hardback version. More info on Kickstarter here https://www.kickstarter.com/about?ref=footer .
I needed to raise £5,000 to
produce the hardback version, and have achieved this. Pledges are of course
welcome from worldwide Chelsea supporters, and differential international costs
are made clear on my Kickstarter page. I
have chosen a set of photographs for this ‘hardback’ version that hopefully
encapsulate Chelsea in that period. Backers will get their names
listed in the front of the book. The
Kickstarter page is open for pledges until 10.00 UK time on 10th July.
In essence backers make a
pledge during that thirty day period, entering their card details into the
secure Kickstarter system. Once the campaign closes, the pledgers become
backers, the money is then deducted from their credit/debit card and a firm
order is placed with the printers for the requisite copies of the hardback
book.
The plan is that the hardback
books will be dispatched to backers in good time for Christmas, hopefully
earlier. Pledgers will receive regular progress updates until the dispatch
date.
The Kickstarter page
link, to enable you to pledge, is here : https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/timrolls/hardback-of-stamford-bridge-is-falling-down?ref=e0xjxw
This
project blog will give further background, details on the book and information
on the pledging process https://stamfordbridgeisfallingdown.wordpress.com/
Twitter:
@IfdBridge Any
questions to: tjrolls@hotmail.com
Tim Rolls
Tim first watched Chelsea in 1967, He has been a
regular match-goer since 1976 and is a home and away season ticket holder. He writes
for cfcuk fanzine and is ex-chair of Chelsea Supporters Trust. ‘Stamford Bridge
Is Falling Down’ is his second book.
This is an edited version of a posting from a couple of weeks ago,
highlighting that the crowdfunding campaign closes on Wednesday morning.