
Interview | Jan Stover, Altona 1893

We spoke to our friend Jan Stover who is visiting us from our Hamburg based sister club, Altona 1893 for a catch up on how things are going over there and ask some random questions.
How are things and how is everyone at Altona?
In contrast to the rest of the world we as Altona 93 supporters are doing fine at the moment. There are some groups of younger fans revitalising our fanszene this season. Loads of new stickers have been produced during the last months. And last weekend we celebrated International Women’s Day with two banners and 25 huge handcrafted purple and white cardboard signs, which we showed during the men’s home match on Saturday (against TSV Sasel) and the women’s home match on Sunday (against TuS Appen).
How many of you are in London this weekend?
As far as I know it’s just Michaela and myself this time because Altona’s men’s team has a very important fixture today.
How is your season going so far in the league/cup competitions?
Sadly, we lost in the fourth round of the cup on penalties to SSV Rantzau and missed another chance to reach the DFB-Pokal in the next season. The sixth division club from Barmstedt is now through to the semifinal. But it’s going quite well in the league. Altona 93 is currently sitting at the top of the table with four points clear (and a game in hand) to runners ups TuS Dassendorf.
Today both teams meet at the AJK. The last time Altona 93 lost a league match was in April 2023 (in Dassendorf) and the last defeat at home dates from October 2022 (again, Dassendorf).
It would be great, if both of these impressive runs could last for another week. T
here were some changes in the women’s team this season, again. But the young team is doing a little better than last season and should avoid relegation in the Landesliga (step 5 in the nationwide pyramid) a little earlier this year.
How are plans for the new stadium coming along?
We have to leave the Adolf-Jäger-Kampfbahn in 2026. Some very skilful and passionate people from our board are working hard on the new stadium plans. It is supposed to be located at a former industrial site next to the Diebsteich station, the area Adolf Jäger grew up.
Will it still be called the Adolf-Jäger-Kampfbahn?
Probably not.

What are you most looking forward to this weekend?
We’re looking forward to seeing how the men’s team has improved since our preseason match in July.
As I haven’t been to a DHFCW match since their first Dulwich season, I’m looking forward to the match tomorrow, too. And last but not least we’re looking forward to meet old and new friends around the matches, attend the pub quiz at The Shirker’s Rest and have a beer with you all.
Kath and Mike even made the way down from Manchester to Champion Hill and will therefore miss out on the West Didsbury and Chorlton banger against Glossop North End, today!
Favourite beer in London?
Is there a SE brewery that hasn’t been sold to the north? Just kidding. Orbit used to have a wonderful red ale brewed with Sorachi Ace hops. I still like the Kernel, Brick and Gipsy Hill beers,
Hepcat is a modern classic in my eyes. As I have a soft spot for Penge (Greetings to the Hint of Mayhem zine!)
I always appreciate(d) Late Knights and Southey. I’m looking forward to taste the Eko beers this weekend. But the thing I’m most keen on is cask ale. There are some places in Scandinavia where you can get it, but I don’t know any in Northern Germany. Like most evenings, I’d like to end this list with Small Beers.
Your league is quite localised in Germany, how far is your furthest away day?
Indeed, it is. By distance from the AJK this would be Buchholz 08 to the south and Düneberger SV to the east. Auntie Google says both are between 36 and 37 kilometers away, if you go by bike. (I have no idea how far that would be in miles. Twenty?)
Favourite away day in your league and why?
This season it has to be Alsterbrüder in February. The ground itself is a crap 4G pitch with just a barrier on one side and behind the goal, but it’s their first season in fifth division, the clubhouse is run by the club and very welcoming. Food and drinks are reasonably priced and the fans built a football book swap inside. The club is in contact with the Swedish writer Torkel Wächter and organised the renaming of the ground to Walter-Wächter-Platz.
Walter was the father of Torkel and had to escape from Nazi Germany, because he was Jewish and involved in the communist resistance. Torkel Wächter discovered this later.
You can find out more about his work under www.32postkarten.com.
It was raining during the whole match, but one of us lives close by and invited us to a prematch brunch and postmatch drinks at a wonderful pub called ‘Wohnzimmer’.
Least favourite away day in your league and why?
The clubs that usually kick off at 10.45am on Sundays. This season these are Paloma and HEBC. The worst (with a running track around the pitch) had been relegated, fortunately.

Favourite UK city outside London and why?
Oh, there are loads. I especially like the seaside towns.
Favourite Hamlet sticker?
There had been some nice ones over the years. My all time favourite is ‘The Hamlet - Pride of South London’, but I admire the ‘Hamlet ‘93’, ‘Up The Hamlet’ and ‘Fridays for Future’ stickers, too. Though there’s one sticker that ticks some boxes in my brain. ‘Defeat the Fascist Snake!’ unites an historical reference, great artwork, political statement and somehow reminds me of the ‘Dialectic Destroying Cobra Morph’ video.
Favourite Hamlet Song?
I must admit, they aren’t the latest: ‘Upside down’ for Ian Daly, ‘I heard a rumour’ for Erhun Oztumer and ‘Vidal of Dulwich’. When it comes to the more timeless ones: ‘Oh Campione’, ‘When I see you Dulwich’ and ‘Here comes the Dulwich, Hamlet!’.

Favourite football ground that is not Champion Hill or the AJK?
I had the pleasure to stay in Barcelona for a year. I was following CE Europa, based at the brilliant Nou Sardenya, home and away for a season and ticked 75 Catalonian grounds altogether. Most of the non league grounds down there are really nice. The most picturesque ones in my opinion were in the small towns in the northeast, Vic and Manlleu in particular. In the UK I would say the old Love Street in Paisley and Bickland Park in Falmouth, to point out just two.
Favourite German word that should be used in the English language?
There are wonderful words in the German language. One that I never used, but you perhaps want to make use of to describe the scenes that sometimes happen with scarfs and seats in the stand before kick off might be ‘Handtuchkrieg’ [‘beach towel war’].
Which Altona fan would be best placed to take down and remove an angry XL Bully dog from the pitch?
There are some muppets in primary school age, who literally attend the home matches since the day of their birth.
They seem to feel extremely at home and in the best way ‘fearless’ at the AJK. Maybe they could manage. (I won’t send them to do so, obviously.)
20 Questions | Morgan Searle
Favourate football team
Chelsea
What do you do for work outside football?
Uni student (sports rehab)
Best away game?
Billericay
Worst banter
Ryan because he didn’t add this question in
Footballing hero?
Lucy bronze
If you didn’t play football, which sport would you play?
Rounders
Earliest football memory?
Winning Surrey cup
Any pre-match superstitions?
Putting on shin pads right then left
Karaoke choice?
Love story
Favourite meal?
Chinese take away and Roast dinner
Worst food to eat?
Curry
Describe a perfect Sunday?
Winning
Best goal you’ve ever scored?
A header
If you had a superpower, it would be...
Invisibility
What is a random fact about yourself?
I’m a twin if you didn’t know already :-)
Best game you’ve watched live?
Wembley FA Cup
Best holiday you’ve ever been on?
Tenerife
Most treasured piece of football memorabilia?
National Cup winning top
What are you most scared of?
Spiders
Best subject in school? (Other than PE?!)
Textiles
20 Questions | Tia Searle
Which team do you support?
Chelsea
What do you do for work outside football?
Sports coach
Best away game?
Reading National Cup Final
Worst dressing room banter?
Ryan
Footballing hero?
Lucy Bronze
If you didn’t play football, which sport would you play?
Hockey
Earliest football memory?
Winning Surrey Cup
Any pre-match superstitions?
Right boot on first
Karaoke choice?
Love story - Taylor Swift
Favourite meal?
Chinese
Worst food to eat?
Sushi
Describe a perfect Sunday?
Winning and Nan’s roast
Best goal you’ve ever scored?
Dribbling through the whole team
If you had a superpower, it would be…
Invisibility
What is a random fact about yourself?
Twin if you didn’t know already ;)
Best game you’ve watched live?
Wembley FA Cup Final
Best holiday you’ve ever been on?
Girl’s Holiday Tenerife
Most treasured piece of football memorabilia?
National cup winning top
What are you most scared of?
Being scared
Best subject in school? (Other than PE?!)
Art
WE’RE IN THE PEPPER ARMY NOW

Somewhere along the line I fell out of love with football. Well, I’ve fallen back in love. And I’ve fallen hard.
A while back, I started going to matches at my local non-league football team, Dulwich Hamlet. It was cheap, within walking distance of my house, and the atmosphere was much less belligerent, much less aggressive, much less spiteful than I’d come to expect from football matches. In short, much more family-friendly. And with pride flags and trans flags hanging in the bar, an International Brigades flag behind one goal and a ‘Don’t Buy the Sun’ banner behind the other, I felt very much at home.
It was a very casual thing. If there was a match on and I was at a loose end, I’d go. Something to do.
But fast forward a couple of years and I seem to have found myself as something of a women’s football ultra.
It’s safe to say I did not see this coming.
Let me backtrack a little...
I’d been to a few women’s games over the past couple of seasons but always took the kids and sat in what is essentially the family stand. It’s actually the only stand but for women’s games it is predominantly filled with families. It’s very sedate. At the start of this season I noticed a small group of fans on the other side of the pitch, calling themselves The Pepper Army.
They were very loud and seemed to be enjoying themselves - plus, like me, they clearly liked a bit of wordplay - so I thought that maybe I should head over there to enjoy the atmosphere. And so I spent the next few games on the fringes of this group. Not quite brave enough to approach them but enthusiastically joining in with the chants.
(At this point, I have to tell you that non-league football chants are The Best - in the course of a match, we take in variations on tunes by Leonard Bernstein, The Specials, Miley Cyrus, Salt & Pepa, Depeche Mode, Ini Kamoze, Beastie Boys, Greig and the theme tune to The OC.)
Then, one fateful day in November, the team had an away match in the FA Cup against Billericay. Now I don’t go back to Essex for many people but I had to make this trip. And that, as they say, was that. Over the course of a few hours in Billericay, I was embraced by The Pepper Army and taken in as one of their own.
And so, at the ripe old age of 42, I’ve found a new group of brilliant friends. And we have a lot of fun. Plus, the connection with the players is something I’ve not experienced before.
They genuinely appreciate our support (this is how some of us ended up crashing the team’s Christmas party - invited, I should add - and how I ended up messaging one on Christmas Day to show her my kids playing her chant - the OC one, no less - on their new kazoos) - and this makes for a better atmosphere all round.
This is what football should be. This is what I want my kids to grow up believing football to be. And to my delight, now, when I ask my son if he wants to come to the football, he asks, “Men’s or women’s?” and if I say men’s, he says, “No thanks”.
The boy’s in the Pepper Army now and I couldn’t be prouder.
The original version of this article first appeared in issue 23 of Sonshine magazine - a quarterly magazine taking a positive slant on parenting sons, to create a better world for all our children.
Instagram: sonshinemagazine
Website: https://sonshinemagazine.com/
20 Questions | Danny Mills

1. Which team do you support?
Liverpool
2. Biggest joker in the dressing room?
The Wizard
3. Worst banter?
Kresh
4. Best player you have ever played with?
The Wizard
5. Footballing hero?
Thierry Henry
6. If you didn’t play football, which sport would you play?
Basketball
7. Earliest football memory?
Year 6 Cup Final
8. Any pre-match superstitions?
Nope
9. Karaoke choice?
Mario- Let Me Love You
10. Favourite meal?
Ackee & Saltfish
11. Worst food to eat?
Black Pudding
12. Describe a perfect Saturday?
Goal, 3 points, Takeaway, Film
13. Best goal you’ve ever scored?
Kettering Vs Bath City- First and only goal outside the box!
14. If you had a superpower, it would be…
Jedi Mind Trick
15. What is a random fact about yourself?
I was a mascot for Liverpool when I was younger walking out with Jamie Redknapp
16. Best game you’ve watched live?
Liverpool v AC Milian Champions League Final 2005
17. Best holiday you’ve ever been on?
Honeymoon- Cancun
18. Most treasured piece of football memorabilia?
Debut Shirt for Peterborough United in the Championship
19. What are you most scared of?
spiders running across my front room floor!!!
20. Best subject in school? (Other than PE?!)
History

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