Could Mr Moon be entering the stadium again? Jeremy Nicholas has offered to wield his mike for nothing in an attempt to improve the match day atmosphere. We certainly need to try everything we can to intimidate the opposition, so his experience should not have been cast aside lightly. And I also suspect Jeremy might be able to do a better job up front than some of our players. Here is his full statement. Any views on this? If so please comment.
A STATEMENT FROM THE FORMER WEST HAM UNITED ANNOUNCER – Jeremy Nicholas.
I’m offering to return as West Ham United announcer for no fee, because
I’m so worried about the situation in which we find ourselves. We need to make
the Boleyn Ground a fortress again.
After sixteen years as the stadium announcer I resigned after the Stoke
game in August, as the club reduced match day costs. My fee was cut by sixty
percent and I decided to hang up my microphone as a matter of pride.
Since I left, the club have taken just four points out of a possible
fifteen at home. The atmosphere in the ground has been awful.
I stayed away at first, as I couldn’t get a ticket.
But I’ve been back for the Chelsea, Manchester City and Fulham games.
I sat in the West Upper for Chelsea and and was shocked. There was no
singing around me and from what I could see it was quiet in most parts of the
ground. It did pick up in the later stages of the game when the Sir
Trevor/Alpari corner started a chant that picked up around the ground.
But bearing in mind we were playing against one of our biggest local
rivals, I thought it was a very quiet game.
West Ham fans are not usually like that. Some of the quiet ones left
early. Once they’d gone the hardcore fans seemed to find their voice. Even
though we were losing, we ended the game loud and proud. It was like the Villa
Park semi-final against Forest in 1991 all over again. I’d like to galvanise
that core support.
We’ve always prided ourselves on being a noisy ground that inspires our
players and intimidates the opposition. We use to tease Arsenal about the
respectful silence at ‘Highbury the Library’, but if I’d taken a few textbooks
along to our last few games, I reckon I could have got a fair bit of revision
done, with little distraction.
Our away support is as magnificent as ever. The travelling West Ham fans
at Anfield were in great voice at the weekend, even though we haven’t won at
Liverpool for fifty years.
Over the past sixteen years I’ve helped mastermind some terrific home
atmospheres, particularly that play off semi-final against Ipswich, when the
Boleyn Ground shook it was so noisy.
Recently fans of the Seattle Seahawks broke the Guinness world record
for the loudest stadium, measuring like a magnitude 1-2 earthquake. I would
like us to be sending shockwaves from an epicentre at Upton Park.
So I’m offering my services free of charge, to help raise the noise and
rebuild Fortress Boleyn. Lots of fans have contacted me and asked if I’d
consider a return. So after a lot of thought I’ve come to the following
conclusion:
As a professional speaker I can’t accept a sixty percent pay cut,
because it just doesn’t seem right.
But as a fan of West Ham United since the age of six, I can’t bear to
sit in the stand and watch as we throw away our home advantage. So I’ve come up
with the idea of doing it for free.
My business manager and my wife think I’m mad, which is no surprise
because they are the same person. My fellow professional speakers think I’m
mad, because as business models go, the free option isn’t a great one. But my
West Ham supporting friends fully understand why I feel I can’t just sit and do
nothing. If I’m going to be up in the stands shouting, I might as well have a
microphone in my hand and sit in my usual seat at the back of the dugout.
I have sixteen years of experience to offer. I’ve not been around as
long as George Sephton at Anfield or David Hamilton at Craven Cottage, but I’m
a well-known voice in the Premier League and also as the stadium announcer on
all the FIFA video games from FIFA 06 up to FIFA 14.
I’ve worked under six West Ham managers so far. Seven if you count Avram
Grant! I’ve also worked with caretaker managers Sir Trevor Brooking and Kevin
Keen and now I’m offering my services for free to Big Sam.
Sam Allardyce has done great things at the club. He won us promotion at
the first attempt and consolidated our position in the first season back in the
Premier League. This season he’s had awful luck with injuries to vital players
that have proved crucial. But there’s lots of cause for optimism at the club
with the emergence of Ravel Morrison, holding onto quality players like Mo
Diame and signings like Andy Carroll and Stewart Downing. We’ve shown we are no
longer a selling club, but we need to hang on to our Premier League status at
all costs.
There’s no need to panic. Once Andy Carroll is back and Winston Reid
returns, we’ll be in great shape. But in the meantime we have to get the home
crowd rocking.
So the offer to return for no fee is on the table. If the club want to
take me up on it, I’ll be delighted to help.
Come on you Irons!
Jeremy
Jeremy Nicholas – stadium announcer
West Ham United 1998-2013
3 comments:
They should bite his hand off! -- a shame how he was let go in the first place.
Nice of him to offer, but personally I think the problem has a lot more to do with changing our centre forward (or playing with one!) than the announcer. And I still cringe from some of his "the fightback starts here" pre-match comments in years past.
Yes, would be nice to have Jem back, though as you say Mo we're in bigger need of a striker. If Danny Graham can score then maybe Maiga can…
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