Following my article entitled TIME NEXT YEAR… GRIFFIN PARK WILL BE CLOSING we received a great reply from down under, explaining why this exiled Bee, and supporter of more than 65 years, feels a move away from Griffin Park should be embraced.
How can you not be looking forward to this time next year? We are all living in one of the two most exciting stages of Brentford FC. Progress and improvement means there will be change and the dear Old Lady that is Griffin Park will always be part of Brentford – but it really is time for her to retire.
When my dad first bought me to Griffin Park in 1954 after (he returned to London with his family, having left to join the RAF in 1939), I can still remember him saying that Griffin Park was ‘tired’ from the one he remembered before WW2 when he never missed a game. I can remember the queues paying in cash at the turnstiles –I think he paid two shillings for himself and nine-pence for me. He taught me much of the history of Brentford and its players from the mid 1920’s until 1939 and just how good Brentford were in those days.
I can also remember entering the ground from Brook Road and walking up the terrace to the New Road Stand and quickly passing the always-shocking smell/odour from the mens’ toilets under the Brook Road Stand. You had to be desperate to pay a visit before, during or after a game.
Griffin Park, back in the first season of Division Three South, had regular attendances around 15,000 and there seemed to be a belief that there would only be a short stay before the rightful place of the Second Division and then the First Division days would return. This was Brentford after all, we were far too good for the basement of League Football.
It would therefore be fitting that, after all these years, the grand Old Lady that is Griffin Park will bow out and retire in a season that will finally see the return to the top Division of English Football, in fact the best division of football anywhere in the world.
That would truly be something special to look forward to with immense anticipation and the most appropriate farewell.
My last visit to Griffin Park was the 1992/93 season’s memorable win over Fulham that all but confirmed promotion. Hopefully, I will return again soon, but is is a long way from Melbourne, Australia.
Everyone who supports Brentford would have memories that will last until our last gasp, so Griffin Park will never die. Griffin Park will be forever a massive part of the rich history of Brentford and, just as this current chapter of Brentford’s history opened with the arrival of Matthew Benham, so too will future chapters open and close.
Brentford has done the hard yards – time again to embrace the future with enthusiasm, hope and expectation of continued success. Not with fear, nervousness or trepidation of what possible disaster could occur.
I reckon we should look forward, embrace change with gusto, but never forget and cherish all that the history of Brentford FC has to offer the small group of supporters that we all are – after all – every one of us knows Griffin Park is part of us.
David Carney
MORE RECENT CONTENT
MOST READ CONTENT
Nobody Gave Us A Chance But We Never Stopped Believing | Brentford Manager Keith Andrews Interview Part 2
There are some conversations that are simply too good to fit into one episode. And now Part 2 of Beesotted’s exclusive sit-down with Brentford FC Head Coach Keith Andrews is LIVE on the Beesotted Brentford Pride of West London Podcast. Recorded once again in...
Keith Andrews Chats To Beesotted Down the Pub: Exclusive Beesotted Interview Part 1
There are some interviews you simply don't want to miss. And we're delighted to announce that Part 1 of Beesotted's exclusive sit-down with Brentford FC Head Coach Keith Andrews is now LIVE on the Beesotted Brentford Pride of West London Podcast. Recorded in...
Beesotted End of School Report: 2025/2026
Now that the dust has settled on another year, Beesotted’s janitor @thecondorman reflects on the past season: Nobody at Brentford High School expected the level of change we saw last summer, with several key pupils, the head teacher and many staff departing –...
Fairy Tales, Faith and Redemption – What The World Cup Means To Me
Rev Peter Crumpler is a Church of England minister in St Albans, Herts, and a lifetime Brentford FC supporter and regular Beesotted contributor... Here's what he thinks of the looming World Cup. “God has prepared me for this moment and, if he allows me, we will...
Clapgate – When Jordan Henderson Forgot
Brentford's draw at Anfield brought the curtain down on a season that came agonisingly close to ending with European qualification. But while disappointment dominated the mood among the travelling Bees fans, Jordan Henderson's decision to acknowledge the...
Saving Europe For The Champions League?
Regular Beesotted contributor, Nemone Sariman, shares her thoughts on how the season ended for Brentford. I’m a teacher and, when I hand back my students’ work after marking, I let them know how far away they are from the next grade up. At first, they don’t...
Sheffield Wednesday preview: Owls visit revives final Griffin Park memories
Sheffield Wednesday's visit will be a very poignant one this season, considering they were the last-ever team to play at Griffin Park in front of fans. The Owls visited us the weekend before football stopped, and were torn apart in a brilliant Brentford display as we...
Ceefax & The Wonder That Was Page 312
Please spare a thought for us exiled supporters who have to stay up ‘til unearthly hours around the world, desperate to find out the Bees’ score. Admittedly myriad options are available to us that are now take for granted; live commentary via the excellent Bees...
The Bee Job Question
Three weeks ago I had a job interview. An interview for a job I was actually quite interested in, rather than just being a way out of the harrowingly dull, underachieving job I have at the moment. I have by me now the letter that arrived today, which will tell me...
The Great Brentford Song Scam
For years Brentford fans have constantly been evolving the songs they employ to support their team. Scientists and historians, such as myself, rarely take an interest in such forms of tribal worship. But, after being approached by Beesotted to take a closer look at...
1942 Leagues Under The Sea – John Chandler RIP
I was in the Navy during the War serving on H.M.S. Cairo (pictured above) when in 1942, Brentford played Portsmouth at Wembley, in the war-time F.A. Cup Final. I couldn’t attend as I was stationed in the Mediterranean around Gibraltar but my father went to the game...
Brentford High School End Of Season Reports 2018/19
As another rollercoaster season at Brentford High School draws to an end, Beesotted’s Condormanruns the rule over the 2018/19 Governors report:Report Summary:So it’s been another year of highs and lows here in TW8 with a lot of disruption across the season,most...
























COMMENT I first attended a Bees Game in 1946 when my father returned from Burma. It was a game against Middlesbrough and I think a 0-0 draw with 50,000 plus there. I’ve been going ever since. I’ll miss Griffin Park like mad but we need to go forward. Just hope they can muster a decent football playing side when the current crop are sold off.
In the 1960s I was a reporter for national newspaper. At one match I noticed Chis Brodie picked something up. It turned out to be a dud grenade. I reported on it and Denis Pigott then the Bees Secretary took away my press pass.
Peter Rosier from the New Road side