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Authors: Alex Fynn

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The significance of Europe is uppermost in Wenger's mind. Firstly, continued participation goes a long way towards underpinning his budget. Secondly, in his own mind, the absence of the Champions League trophy is a gaping hole in his CV that he is determined to fill in before his work at Arsenal is complete. “I want to win the Champions League but it's step by step,” he says. “And to win not once but two or three times, to go into the history of European football.” And if he can do it with his ‘third' Arsenal side, it will be the supreme achievement, against all the odds.
CHAPTER SEVEN
MOVE ALONG NOW
In the summer of 1998 Arsenal announced that their upcoming Champions League matches would not be staged at their own home. As newly crowned Premiership champions the club, for the first time since 1991, had qualified for the rebranded European Cup. In the intervening seven years the competition had undergone a dramatic makeover. So much so that Arsenal were apparently unwilling to meet the stipulated commercial criteria demanded by UEFA. The broadcasters and sponsors who underwrote the competition and provided the huge financial rewards required literally hundreds of tickets, hospitality and parking spaces. Highbury might not have been ideal, but with a little effort and imagination the obligations could have been fulfilled. Somehow, the venue that could not cope in 1998 and 1999 was subsequently able to host six campaigns when the club's original choice of Wembley Stadium began the process of reconstruction. The club bit the bullet and moved a couple of hundred Highbury season-ticket holders from their prime West Stand seats. They also had to leave the first four pitchside rows empty, presumably irritating more fans, so that the perimeter advertising boards of the Champions League sponsors could have the necessary impact. As a result, capacity was reduced to 35,500.
But the main reason behind the decision to sacrifice a large measure of home advantage and play at Wembley in 1998 was that the directors knew only too well that more and more potential revenue was being lost with every successive home fixture. Moving the Champions League matches to a venue that could accommodate over 70,000 would give them a firm idea of how many people might be prepared to pay to watch the team if more tickets were available. And of course they could make more money if their hunch proved correct.
The trio of group-stage opponents – Dynamo Kiev, Panathinaikos and Lens – were hardly the stuff of legend to fire the imagination of the Gooner multitude, so as insurance against the potential embarrassment of banks of empty seating, prices were heavily discounted, with thousands available at £10. And it worked, as all three matches easily sold out. However, the downside of the exercise was that Arsenal went out, finishing third despite the questionable standard of the opposition, group winners Dynamo Kiev excepted. At least the following season, there was less disgrace in being eliminated by Barcelona and Fiorentina, although the exit was still a terrible letdown after creditable away draws against both clubs. Arsenal had not bargained for the opposition, without exception, raising their game, stimulated by the prospect of playing at one of the historic homes of football. Although these appear in the Arsenal record books as home fixtures, there was no question that effectively they took place at a neutral venue.
At least the third match of the group against unglamorous Swedish opponents provided the reassurance that Arsenal could fill the high capacity whoever they were playing. “What really opened my eyes,” Arsène Wenger later reflected “was that when we played against [AIK] Solna in the Champions League at Wembley we sold 74,000 seats and the opponent wasn't anybody exceptional.” “Why?” asked David Dein rhetorically. “Because we had 20,000 seats at £10. We simply have to have a bigger stadium. We are at a dis advantage [at Highbury]. You go to Old Trafford and they've got over 60,000 of their own fans behind them. People want to see us. Now is the time to act.” Ultimately, from a market ing point of view at least it was an invaluable experiment, albeit at the cost of effectively delaying the team's learning process on the continent by a couple of seasons.
To even begin to satisfy their potential customers, the board would have to look at leaving Highbury for good. The Wembley experience created an about turn in the directors' plans. Chairman Peter Hill-Wood recalls, “We had a board meeting and decided to look at building a new stadium and we agreed unanimously we wouldn't move, and then we changed our mind. I think you've always got to be prepared to do that.” To David Dein the marble halls were history. “We are treading water,” he said. “What we are doing now [by being at Highbury] is to keep putting prices up in order to try to meet overheads and you now have a different supporter profile. And that in my opinion is not right.”
Worried about the impending drain on resources that building a new stadium would entail and how it might affect the playing side, Dein continued to press for other options with Wembley at the top of his list of candidates. He wanted Arsenal to consider returning to Wembley with its re-opening scheduled for 2003. He felt that if Wembley became Arsenal's permanent home it would in time become a stronghold, just as it had been for England for decades. Of course the stadium would be owned by the FA, still staging cup finals and England internationals, and Arsenal would be its partner by virtue of providing the bulk of its turnover. It was an unusual concept – with matchday and event income more than covering the fixed and variable costs of building and administration providing the unlikely scenario of relegation was avoided.
However, when it came for support for his Wembley plan Dein was soon in a minority of one. “I think that the rest of the board felt that [Dein's] judgment was quite wrong,” said Peter Hill-Wood. “Whether he had a different agenda to the rest of us is a moot point. We were convinced that we had to have our own stadium. To be tenants of the FA at Wembley with an ever-increasing rental didn't make any financial sense.” It would have been unheard of for a top-tier British club not to own their own home, although a common arrangement in Italy where a stadium is often owned by the local authority and sometimes hosts more than one team, such as Rome's Stadio Olimpico (shared by Roma and Lazio) and the San Siro (home of AC Milan and Internazionale). The vice-chairman's view was based on a belief that the immediate here and now was what counted and, if successful, the future would take care of itself.
His co-directors did consider buying Wembley outright. “We actually made a bid before the FA bought it [from Wembley plc],” confirms Hill-Wood. “It would not have been the right answer but we were serious about it.” This was a bizarre standpoint considering the club's poor playing results at the national stadium. Arsenal were prepared to ignore the maxim that to have a successful business you first have to have a successful team. Apart from the attendances, Wembley had provided little evidence it could replace the stronghold that was Highbury. However, the argument was soon academic. The old venue hosted its final match in autumn 2000, with the FA aiming to replace the existing structure and re-open for business within three years. A seemingly never-ending succession of construction, financial and legal problems resulted in the new Wembley eventually staging its first match several months after the Emirates was up and running.
Another option for Arsenal was to locate near the M25 motorway in Hertfordshire, which would have allowed for easier access by car, and little in the way of ‘NIMBY' objections or construction constraints. However, while parking problems would have been mitigated, there would have been fewer links to public transport and due to its lack of proximity to the West End and the City, the corporate hospitality market, not least for midweek matches, would have been more difficult to attract.
The club were persuaded to change their focus away from greenfield sites by Antony Spencer, a partner of land agents Anthony Green and Spencer. Initially involved with the board as a conduit for the Eurostar development at Kings Cross – Eurostar wanted to incorporate Arsenal in their plans for a new station – Spencer quickly recognised that there were insoluble problems with that concept and switched his attention to coming up with an alternative even closer to home. Superimposing an exact to scale footprint of the Wembley Stadium site on the London N5 section of the A–Z, the possibility of Ashburton Grove leapt off the page at him. A triangle of land sandwiched between the London to Glasgow railway line, the Hornsey Road and Queensland Road, housing a council waste depot and several small businesses, the site was just about big enough for a stadium but obtaining planning permission would be problematic to say the very least.
With Arsenal pursuing a number of different options, now including Finsbury Park, Spencer, having become even more convinced that his idea was viable – despite initially been told by the board not to be ridiculous, it was a built-up area – eventually persuaded them to allow him to present his proposal. The thrust of his presentation was that “Arsenal should move to Arsenal”, 500 yards down the road. As Spencer later reflected, “If the planning rules had been strictly enforced, the site would never have been selected as it was a designated industrial site [prohibiting leisure development].” But he knew that Islington Council were desperate to keep the club in the borough and the fact that they owned 80 per cent of the site might just make the pipe dream a reality.
With Arsenal only interested in finding a new home, Spencer had to alert them to the necessity of incorporating regeneration as a fundamental plank in the project if they were ever going to get permission for an inner London stadium. It took a while for a meeting of minds. He eventually convinced them that “they were being taken for a walk in the park” regarding their preferred site of Finsbury Park (a contact of Spencer's at the Government Office For London told him, “they're crazy if they think they're going to build a football stadium in a park”). What Spencer brought to the party was the power of his argument as a committed supporter and his expertise as a property developer. He persuaded the board that he was a pragmatist who practised the art of the possible. Long after the Emirates was up and running, acting Managing Director Ken Friar was finally able to generously give Spencer his due. “We wouldn't have been able to do it [re-locate to Ashburton Grove] without his foresight. It was under our noses and we couldn't see it. Not only did he find it for us but he spent the next few years putting it together.”
Having settled on Ashburton Grove, a scheduled opening date within four years – August 2004 – was announced, which was hopelessly optimistic given the unchartered territory that had to be navigated in the planning and construction of a 60,000 capacity football stadium in an inner London borough, not to mention the relocation of the waste transfer station.
As progress proceeded apace, Danny Fiszman was intrigued to learn how Spencer was proving so adroit in acquiring the necessary land from the small businesses on the site. He persuaded Spencer to take him to one of his meetings. As they got out of Spencer's car, Fiszman said to him, “Antony, haven't you forgotten something?” meaning his briefcase containing the necessary offer documents. “Oh yes,” said Spencer, and went to the boot of his car and took out a baseball bat. Fiszman blanched, remembering only the previous week that Spencer had given him a dvd of
The Sopranos
. Spencer laughed, put the bat – which belonged to his baseball-playing son and just happened to be in his car that morning – back, retrieved his briefcase and they went to their appointment. Afterwards, recalling the reaction of the vendor, who said, “It's not every day somebody comes in to buy your property surrounded by two stinking rubbish dumps with rats running round everywhere. You'd [the Arsenal duo] better sit down and have a cup of tea.” Spencer told Fiszman that his
modus operandi
was polite perseverance. No force necessary.
Unfortunately by this time Danny Fiszman's relationship with David Dein was not so cordial. Fiszman had bought into the club in 1992 when Dein, in need of investment in his commodity company, had sought a sympathetic purchaser for a significant chunk of his 42 per cent holding who would agree to voting with him on key decisions. As the decade progressed, Dein required further funds to plough into an ultimately fruitless and highly costly legal attempt to recover a bad debt related to his non-Arsenal business. Effectively, Fiszman became a cash machine for the vice-chairman, as he purchased outright more and more of the shares he held jointly with Dein. Most significantly, control of a block of shares transferred in 1996 enabled Fiszman to overtake Dein as Arsenal's largest shareholder. In December 1999, Dein sold what remained of the jointly held shares to Fiszman, leaving Dein with a 16.2 per cent stake (compared with Fizman's 28 per cent).
Then the pair fell out. The specific reason why the two men argued remains the subject of speculation to this day, even to chairman Hill-Wood, who maintains, “I don't know [why they fell out]. I'd be very interested. Danny has never said anything to me about it. He's very discreet.” When it was put to Dein that money issues might be the cause of his relationship with Fiszman breaking down, he dismissed the notion. Certainly there is a case for believing they may have disagreed about the stadium issue to such an extent that their previously harmonious state could never be repaired. It was the biggest decision the club had ever made. And Fiszman gaining the support of the other directors for Ashburton Grove was something Dein may have taken as a personal affront.
With the new stadium and its concomitant commercial and financial ramifications prioritised, David Dein's remit became confined to the playing staff (which over the years, whatever his other specific responsibilities, had always been his primary concern). With only a supporting role on the main project, to make matters worse for Dein, Keith Edelman was drafted in as managing director to replace Ken Friar. With choppy waters ahead, the club needed a harsh dose of financial reality and Edelman fitted the bill perfectly. In name, Edelman may have been succeeding Friar, but he effectively became Arsenal's first full-time chief executive. He was the antithesis of Dein, far more businessman than football man. Maybe so, but contracts with builders and bankers rather than the football authorities were now the order of the day.
BOOK: Arsènal
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