I began going to Arsenal in 1992. My obsession with soccer blossomed in a short time, I used to be from an enormous soccer household and it was very a lot in my blood. Like quite a lot of neurodivergent individuals (I’m dyspraxic which qualifies me as neurodiverse; however I don’t expertise it as profoundly as many with ASDs do) I’ve tended to construct up sturdy fascinations with issues.
There aren’t quite a lot of issues I’m mildly keen on, I’m an all or nothing man in the case of my hobbies and pastimes. Simply as shortly as my obsession with soccer started to develop, my obsession with writing grew too. Consistent with my neurodivergence, in school I discovered there weren’t many topics I used to be common at.
I used to be both probably the greatest within the class or one of many worst. As an adolescent my artwork homework was so unhealthy that each Monday morning earlier than double artwork, my classmates would line up with large grins on their faces so they might see- and snigger at- how unhealthy my artwork homework was. I argued bitterly with my artwork trainer who insisted I wasn’t making an attempt. I used to be. My mind simply couldn’t work out drawing and nonetheless can’t.
English nevertheless, I excelled at. I beloved writing and so it didn’t take me very lengthy to determine that writing about soccer was what I wished to do with my life. I saved journals about Arsenal for years and years and years. In truth, I solely stopped holding handwritten journals of Arsenal video games once I began scripting this column in February 2011 when a) I had much less time for it and b) it felt redundant now I used to be publishing my ideas about Arsenal on an enormous platform.
My gateway drug when it got here to soccer writing was the match day programme. To me, this was a sacred doc and greater than only a memento of the Highbury match day. On this interval (*excessive Grandpa Simpson voice*) within the pre-digital period, the match day programme was actually the one Arsenal particular content material out there.
No official web site, no web or social media, no podcasts. Newspapers and radio coated soccer in a generalist vogue however membership particular content material didn’t exist in every other type (except you wished to pay £1.99 a minute on Membership Name- youthful readers can Google that). The programme was the primary, possibly even solely, approach that the supervisor and the captain communicated with supporters.
Common interviews with gamers didn’t occur in every other medium. Once more, like most neurodivergent kids, I additionally actually loved the extra quantitative treasures inside these pages. Simply as you see at present, the again of the programme contained staff line-ups, substitutions and attendances in a neatly tabulated vogue. I might attempt to memorise attendances after which check myself on them on the subsequent house recreation.
My curiosity within the ladies’s staff is straight attributable to the match day programme. As a result of I learn it from cowl to cowl, I learn the updates in regards to the youth and girls groups in the direction of the again too. There was no footage out there of the ladies’s staff, so these match reviews and photographs had been my solely hyperlinks; however I absorbed them.
After I went to my first ladies’s match in April 1996, Naz Ball scored the winner in opposition to Arsenal Women for Wembley Women. Ball performed for Arsenal and scored regularly, I knew this as a result of I noticed her image within the programme so typically. From these small acorns my curiosity within the staff grew.
The programme earned various different distinctions over time, it was the place away ticket data was printed earlier than that moved to the official web site. It was additionally the primary place that you’d see the brand new package for subsequent season. I all the time remembered the competitors within the Junior Gunners part referred to as ‘Face within the crowd’, they’d print a crowd shot from the Household Enclosure with a crimson ring round somebody’s face. If that somebody was you, you bought two free tickets to an upcoming house match.
When academy gamers broke right into a matchday squad, there could be a way of familiarity as a result of I had seen their image and browse their title within the academy part of the programme. Across the time I began going to Highbury, names akin to Adrian Clarke (marvel what occurred to him?), Mark Flatts, Gavin McGowan and Matthew Rose felt acquainted to me despite the fact that I had but to see them kick a ball.
Later, when squad numbers had been launched from the 1993-94 season, I might attempt to memorise these for different groups from the again of the programme. Within the mid-Nineties, a month-to-month Arsenal journal was launched that was written and printed by the identical individuals and I held it in related esteem. Once more, this was actually the one Arsenal particular content material out there on the time and I assume it planted the seed that I may write about my membership for a residing sooner or later.
As I superior into my teenage years and wished extra impartial content material, I grew to become way more conscious of the thriving fanzine scene. The Gooner fanzine was the primary place I ever had an article printed in print (August 2006) and I wrote for them for a few years thereafter. The hours I spent studying the Gooner unfold my wings and helped me to assume extra independently and critically- that interplay of settlement and disagreement actually helped me to push my essential considering.
That mentioned, within the 1992-93 season, probably as a response to the fanzine motion, the membership really gave over pages within the official programme for correspondence and had been surprisingly free and simple, editorially talking. For these of you capable of see the picture legibly, take a look at this missive from Des Ferguson vis a vis the shortage of ethnic variety on the well-known North Financial institution mural. That might by no means be printed at present.
This part additionally printed missives from followers complaining about Sky’s new fangled Monday Night time Soccer, some accusing the FA of specific bias in opposition to Arsenal and Ian Wright specifically and several other questioning the usual of refereeing within the Premier League. Once more, these are all issues you’ll learn on the web each day in 2025 however it’s troublesome to think about the membership voluntarily publishing them in an official outlet.
The need for this form of content material has not modified over time, in fact, solely the supply of it. Digitisation has been the midwife to an explosion of content material, each by journalists and followers, that places into the shade even the punk rock impressed fanzine revolution of the Eighties.
For me, the match day programme was a gateway drug that scratched any variety of itches. It nourished me with artistic content material, interviews, statistics and, for one season, good previous unhinged fan rants. It’s no exaggeration to say that my life would have been very totally different with out it.