Daily Mail

Time to bulldoze London Stadium

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COvId-19 prevented a major athletics meeting taking place in London in 2020; the cost of converting the London Stadium from its football configurat­ion scuppered this summer’s event and there will likely be no athletics in the capital next year, either. ‘the biggest weakness is London,’ said Sir Brendan Foster. ‘to not have the sport in London is a big problem. London was White City, London was Crystal Palace. ‘Crystal Palace was the spiritual home of British Athletics. events there were electric. You can’t have a major sport that doesn’t exist in London. It feels like athletics is in danger of losing its soul.’ Yet whose fault is that? there is an egotistica­l obsession with the grandiose London Stadium when a purposebui­lt, smaller home that can be identified as athletics’ base is needed. Crystal Palace was perfect. the focus on the London Stadium has seen it fall into decay and disrepair. Weeds have overwhelme­d turnstile areas, pigeons nest in the stands, the concrete crumbles, the paint peels, there are potholes in the track. Any maintenanc­e investment exists merely to stop the place falling down. the exorbitant costs of converting the London Stadium for one meeting a year are a disgracefu­l misuse of funds, when athletics’ spiritual home is collapsing. At the time when the legacy of the Olympic Stadium was being discussed, daniel Levy’s plan was for tottenham to buy it, convert the site for sole football use and restore Crystal Palace to its former glory for athletics’ purposes. For obvious reasons, the idea was dismissed. Imagine if days after the 2012 Games ended, the arena that hosted Super Saturday was bulldozed to the ground for a Premier League football club. It would have felt as short-sighted as the decision to turn the original Cavern Club into a car park. With the passing of time, however, that would now be the way forward. Let West ham, the London Stadium’s primary tenants, purchase and develop the site for football, and ring-fence some of the funds to make Crystal Palace the home of athletics again. It used to have a capacity of 15,000, maybe increase that to 25,000. Athletics really doesn’t need much more. It certainly doesn’t need to stay clinging to the memory of one glorious night nine years gone. It is this indulgence that holds back the sport.

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