https://www.telegraph.co.uk/footbal...ggestions-12bn-final-stadium-bill-inaccurate/
Wow................what a load of bollocks.
Wow................what a load of bollocks.
They have their agenda and they just spin the story around it. It's a rag.https://www.telegraph.co.uk/footbal...ggestions-12bn-final-stadium-bill-inaccurate/
Wow................what a load of bollocks.
Appears to be the usual unnamed source bullshit, PL.Just read a report on an Australian news feed about drinking and drug taking by workers at the stadium site - Mace is denying this.
Anyone shed some light on these allegations?

The real surprise would be if NONE of the builders used drugs. This is London in 2018 it's what happens.Just read a report on an Australian news feed about drinking and drug taking by workers at the stadium site - Mace is denying this.
Anyone shed some light on these allegations?
The real surprise would be if NONE of the builders used drugs. This is London in 2018 it's what happens.
City and Chelsea advertise matches coming up that particular week in on TalkSport and (In Chelsea's case) in the Standard. That suggests their fans are not buying tickets to matches despite them both winning 2 or 3 titles, 3 or 4 FA or League cups and Chelsea winning the EL and CL in the past 10 years.Chelsea, PSG and Man City fans probably don’t mind.
Thanks Brian, thought as much, but like in the UK our media loves a scandal story even if its partially made up.When I had a local pub that I went in most days, it was mostly full of scaffolders, joiners, plasterers etc. Probably because they were young without kids, finished early and drank straight from work, as I did. Drug taking, mostly coke, was absolutely rife. A dealer used to deal outside the pub on a Friday night.
I reckon that every major build in London has someone off their tits on something on most days. Although we own the stadium, Mace run the site until handover. Spurs will have no idea whether workers are sober and clean or incapable of standing up without help. We pay Mace to run the site and they are responsible for what does or doesn't happen there. Even if Spurs insisted Mace only allow workers on site if they could prove they were drunk or coked up, they wouldn't do it.
This is a complete non-story but comes out of the 'void' of news coming out of the club, as does the nonsense about the stadium costing £1.2 billion. If the club were more proactive on PR, there'd be less opportunity for this stuff. .
Partially?Thanks Brian, thought as much, but like in the UK our media loves a scandal story even if its partially made up.
Just read a report on an Australian news feed about drinking and drug taking by workers at the stadium site - Mace is denying this.
Anyone shed some light on these allegations?
Just read a report on an Australian news feed about drinking and drug taking by workers at the stadium site - Mace is denying this.
Anyone shed some light on these allegations?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45586929
Finally, the club has got some decent publicity out there. There really is a hole where our PR should be. I get that DL and Joe Lewis are private people but the void encourages damaging speculation by hacks.
The stadium is an incredible thing. A club has committed to its historic location and to building an incredible new, world class facility for football and myriad other events. It's driving changes in transport that will massively benefit the locality and will encourage the economic and social redevelopment of an area that has become a byword for all manner of problems.
It will also transform the future of the football club. The press think that the story is a few months delay on a spectacularly innovative and successful build and allegations of drug use that affects every project and site. I wonder what the reaction will be once its open?
Pitch being laid ' next week'...…. Whether that's fact or a summation from the previous 'next month' comments is another matterhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45586929
Finally, the club has got some decent publicity out there. There really is a hole where our PR should be. I get that DL and Joe Lewis are private people but the void encourages damaging speculation by hacks.
The stadium is an incredible thing. A club has committed to its historic location and to building an incredible new, world class facility for football and myriad other events. It's driving changes in transport that will massively benefit the locality and will encourage the economic and social redevelopment of an area that has become a byword for all manner of problems.
It will also transform the future of the football club. The press think that the story is a few months delay on a spectacularly innovative and successful build and allegations of drug use that affects every project and site. I wonder what the reaction will be once its open?
It won't last long mate. The next thing will be that Spurs will have an unfair advantage over other clubs because the plastic pitch could be used every day of the week and we would still be able to play football on a Saturday. The pitch does not need time to recover. If that starts to generate £300-£500M a year and we use that as a transfer budget/for salaries, we will be accused of cheating. There will probably be rule changes proposed by the blue eyed boys the second that we win anything.
“The situation has been compounded for season ticket holders due to incompatible ticketing systems between the new stadium and Wembley - requiring fans to claim a refund from the club for games that have moved and then having to buy a new ticket for the game at Wembley.”https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/45586929
Finally, the club has got some decent publicity out there. There really is a hole where our PR should be. I get that DL and Joe Lewis are private people but the void encourages damaging speculation by hacks.
The stadium is an incredible thing. A club has committed to its historic location and to building an incredible new, world class facility for football and myriad other events. It's driving changes in transport that will massively benefit the locality and will encourage the economic and social redevelopment of an area that has become a byword for all manner of problems.
It will also transform the future of the football club. The press think that the story is a few months delay on a spectacularly innovative and successful build and allegations of drug use that affects every project and site. I wonder what the reaction will be once it's open?