Olympic stadium: West Ham and Newham united

From the BBC:

West Ham are in talks with Newham Council over a joint bid to occupy the Olympic Stadium after the 2012 Games….The east London club and council hope the arena, in Newham borough, will feature “both football and athletics”. Interested parties have an eight-week deadline to submit plans, with the Olympic Park Legacy Company set to make a decision on the stadium’s future use by March 2011.

A joint statement from West Ham and Newham Council read: “The proposal would be to make the venue a vibrant centre of sport, culture and education, featuring both football and athletics. “Open day and night all year round, it would have an active community use, inspiring learning and achievement and helping to create a better quality of life for tens of thousands.”

They’re proposing an “Olympic visitor centre and football museum” on the site, which might help bridge any uncomfortable culture gap between Saturday afternoon shoppers at Stratford’s new, monster Westfield and Saturday afternoon footie fans.

Could it happen? The involvement of Newham might reassure the OPLC that there’s more to the Hammers’ interest than presumptuous publicity-seeking – the borough’s ebullient Mayor, Sir Robin Wales, is on the newly-formed company’s board. But there remains the big, awkward question of a Grand Prix-standard athletics track.

London pledged to maintain one at the stadium as part of its bid to get the Games, and Sebastian Coe remains publicly dedicated to doing so. He too might be encouraged by Newham’s interest, given that Wales is on the Locog board too. But Coe must know as well as anyone that you’d be lucky to fill the stadium more than once a year for an athletics event, even at its presently proposed post-Games capacity of 25,000. That would mean, public subsidy and plenty of it. Today’s budget seems likely to subject such an ambition to a reality test.

Grilled about the stadium’s future by the London Assembly recently, OPLC chair Margaret Ford and chief executive Andrew Altman were pressed to admit that Seb’s dream is unlikely to come true. They stuck stoutly to the line that their formal invitations to interested parties includes athletics provision being a prerequisite. But that rich, long term tenant could only be a big-time football club, and big-time football clubs don’t want athletics tracks round their pitches.

How could the Hammers and Newham plan resolve that fundamental tension and host “both football and athletics,” as their joint statement promises? Could something clever be done with removable seats, or have they been persuaded by the words of the Ford who told the Assembly that as a season ticket-holder at Stamford Bridge she often found the ground’s sight lines restricted. The advantage of being a little further from the action, she explained, is that you can actually see more of it.

This opinion was shared by Labour’s Murad Qureshi, a big sports fan. He mentioned the Olympic stadium in Rome which is home to both Roma and Lazio FCs and also hosted 1990 World Cup matches. These included the tournament’s opening fixture between holders Argentina and Cameroon. I was there and can still see Maradona heading for the dressing room after his team was turned over by the impertinent Africans. Would I have had such a memorable view had their not been a running track around the pitch?

Questions, questions, with no clear answers as yet. And here’s another one. What if West Ham is no longer a Premier League club in a few weeks’ time?

Olympic games 2012West Ham UnitedLondonDave Hillguardian.co.uk

Would big football and a big tower enhance the post-Olympics neighbourhood?

I’ve been trying to imagine what life would be like as a post-Games resident of the Olympic Park. Would I be blissfully immersed in a new frontier urban village living experience, combining glamour shopping, quality leisure and sylvan delights or would I end up stuck in some undistinguished modern flat in a faux neighbourhood with no soul?

I find it quite hard to decide. But I’m pretty confident that if West Ham’s new owners move the Upton Park club into the Olympic stadium it would have a big effect. Present plans for the stadium, insofar as they exist, involve it hosting intermittent one-off big sporting events. But if a Premier League club moved in such events would become far more regular – once a fortnight at the very least. For better or for worse that would be a lot different from the occasional bit of 20/20 cricket and international athletics event.

Will it happen? Paul Norman reports that the Olympic Legacy Delivery Company is sure to be interested but that Westfield – whose super-duper new shopping complex will be a major feature of the Park – is not keen. Newham mayor Sir Robin Wales has spoken up for the Hammers’ plan, but Tessa Jowell has asked out loud where the money will come from. Then there’s the vexed question of the running track. Locog says there would have to be one. Hammers owner David Sullivan has other ideas.

Meanwhile, according to The Architects Journal:

Anish Kapoor is understood to have landed a project to build a huge tower in the Olympic Park just days after another proposed East London landmark – the £300 million mega-mosque – hit the buffers. According to AJ sources, the Turner Prize-winning artist has scooped the Boris Johnson-backed contest to build a massive sculpture on the 2012 site. Kapoor’s scheme, which would tower above the Olympic stadium and has the support of steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, saw off competition from Antony Gormley.

Big towers, big football, big shopping. Heaven? Hell?

Olympic games 2012LondonLondon politicsWest Ham UnitedDave Hillguardian.co.uk

West Ham footballer Calum Davenport charged with assaulting his sister

• Premier League defender was stabbed in both legs in incident
• Former England Under-21 international denies attack

Premier League footballer Calum Davenport has been charged with assaulting his sister during an incident in which he was stabbed in both legs.

The West Ham United defender, 26, who denies any wrongdoing, was charged this afternoon with causing actual bodily harm on Cara Davenport, 28.

Her boyfriend, Worrell Whitehurst, 25, has appeared in court charged with attacking the centre-back as well as his mother, 49-year-old Kim Stupple, in the driveway of her home in Bedford, in August.

Davenport said in a statement: “I am deeply shocked and disappointed at the decision that has been made to charge me with assault. I deny any wrongdoing and will plead not guilty. For legal reasons, I am unable to discuss the matter further at this time.”

Davenport, of Greenfield, Bedford, will appear before Bedford magistrates on 10 November.

A statement from Bedfordshire police said: “Professional footballer Calum Davenport has been charged with assault causing actual bodily harm on a woman following an incident in Bedford on 22 August.”

Davenport, a former England Under-21 international, underwent emergency surgery at Bedford Hospital for stab wounds to both legs after an incident at his mother’s home at 5am.

Davenport cost West Ham £3m when he joined them from Tottenham during the summer of 2007. He spent a spell on loan at Premier League rivals Sunderland last season and has also been loaned out to Watford.

The centre-back started his career at Coventry and has also played on loan at Southampton and Norwich.

Davenport’s career was hanging in the balance after the incident but he has been able to return to light training and swimming after surgery, which left him with a 15-inch scar on his leg.

Doctors had to cut through muscle to repair the damage to Davenport’s artery.

Writing on the club website recently, the player said he was feeling positive.

“At the moment I am still in hospital and have quite a long way to go on the road to recovery but I am feeling positive,” he said.

“Thanks to the club, my team-mates and fans, to the club doctors and the amazing staff at Bedford Hospital who have looked after me so well.”

West Ham UnitedPremier LeagueCrimeJonathan Haynesguardian.co.uk