The Onion Bag: Occasionally humorous football satire
"Football satire at its finest" msn.com
"Cruel, heartless b*st*rds" Fox Sports
"Will have you laughing like a drain" itv.com
Issue 330
15 February 2010
Updated Weekly
GET THE WEEKLY EMAIL

spies like them

OLD BAG: This is an archive story from Issue 173 - 4 Dec 2006
Johnny Pundit

Johnny Pundit: Now listen to me... listen to me

Cambridge spies

Not your average West Ham supporter

Alexander Litvinenko

Who ate all the pies

Johnny P toddles in from the cold

Funny old thing, Football. For instance, politics. Mostly you ignore it. But sometimes it turns and snaps off your nose. That was certainly the case in the strangest match I ever played in…

Freak weather

My playing days were plumb in the middle of the Cold War. It never really affected us; well, only once. The West Ham Chairman had fixed up a pre-season friendly against Dynamo Moscow. Quite a thing in those days. Only trouble was, there was some freak weather - floods all over England. East Anglia turned into a giant lake punctuated only by the odd church spire. You never got many for pre-season friendlies anyway but the Chairman, thinking he could make a quick buck, over-charged for seats. That, and the weather, meant nobody turned up.

Urgent whispering

Apart from about hundred people scattered throughout the stadium. Half of them dressed in Homburg hats and large overcoats; the other half in pinstripes and bowlers, making careful use of newspapers to hide their faces. Even odder, none of them paid any attention to the match. Instead, they spent the entire ninety minutes sidling up to one another, briefly muttering whilst looking straight ahead and then sidling off again. Some of them surreptitiously chalked stuff on various parts of the stadium. We won 3-2, but the match was played in almost complete silence, broken only by urgent whispering; and when we trooped off the pitch, nobody moved at all.

Big

It was only later that someone explained what was happening. Dynamo Moscow had brought the capital's spies out, thinking to meet up with their counterparts and moles in a big crowd where they could stay nicely anonymous. But nobody else turned up, leaving eight dozen spies eyeing each other warily across Upton Park as if on a spectacularly unsuccessful mass blind date.

Dicks

Funny thing as I left the ground. Looked back, saw the floodlights still on. It's only this week, forty years on - seeing that poor chappie on the news who was force-fed radiation pies - that I realised the glow above the Boleyn Ground wasn't floodlights at all. Well, that explains Julian Dicks, if nothing else.

Trust nobody,

Also in Issue 173

Copyright © 2003 - 2010 The Onion Bag

Also in Issue 173