Cup-winners Palace snub Perry over Town Hall victory parade

EXCLUSIVE: For Croydon’s Tory Mayor, failing to get a chance to bask in the reflected glory of the football club is another tale of ‘what might have been’. By STEVEN DOWNES

Increasingly desperate: Jason Perry’s attempt to wrap himself in red and blue has received a snub from the club

Croydon Mayor Jason Perry has been snubbed by Crystal Palace Football Club over the staging of the FA Cup-winners’ victory parade. The parade goes ahead on Bank Holiday Monday, but it is going nowhere near the Town Hall.

Palace finally confirmed the details of their open-top bus parade this morning – a somewhat curtailed ride down Whitehorse Lane to Selhurst Park, after Bromley Council refused them permission to end their celebrations in Crystal Palace Park.

Yet Palace did have another possible option with Croydon – an option they chose not to take.

Inside Croydon understands that in the lead-up to last Saturday’s FA Cup final, officials from Croydon Council approached the club to enquire about their plans for the traditional cup-winners’ parade – an event that has never occurred before, with the FA Cup being the first major trophy win in the club’s 120-year history.

The only previous time that Crystal Palace have had an open-top bus parade in the borough that they call home was in 1969, after winning promotion to the old First Division. On that occasion, the parade ended at the Fairfield Halls, rather than at the Town Hall.

Prayers answered: Eze and his Palace team mates celebrate the decisive goal scored in Saturday’s Wembley Cup final

Croydon’s elected Mayor Jason Perry likes nothing better than to wrap himself in red and blue as some kind of protection against the mounting criticisms of his failed administration.

He frequently refers to his season ticket-holder status at Selhurst Park, such as when he shoe-horned that detail into his annual “State of the Borough” address in the Town Hall Chamber last week.

Before the Wembley final, Perry cut a slightly desperate figure as he tried to jump on the Palace goodwill bandwagon with a video message from inside his favourite Croydon venue, Boozepark.

The Tory Mayor would have liked nothing better than to be able to welcome Steve Parish, Oliver Glasner, final goal-scorer Eberechi Eze and the rest of the squad, together with the FA Cup itself, on the steps of Croydon Town Hall at the end of their parade.

Imagine the photo ops, less than a year before the council elections! Imagine the pages that pictures from such an event could fill in the next issue of Perry’s Our Croydon news rag, all paid for with your money!

But Perry has been denied his moment basking in the reflected limelight of Palace’s finest hour and a half.

Council overtures to the club received a firm “No thanks” over the possibility of routing their parade into the centre of Croydon.

With two league fixtures still to play after the Cup final, the season ending at Anfield against Liverpool in the Premier League on Sunday, Palace never intended to stage their victory parade on the day after Wembley (Manchester City, the losing finalists, had made a similar decision on the contingency that they might win).

Short ride: the route of Crystal Palace’s victory parade, which is being staged on Monday

Rather than parade the two miles or so from Selhurst Park to Croydon Town Hall, the football club wanted to take the players and staff to Crystal Palace Park, which comes under the local authority control of Bromley.

“It would be especially poignant,” a Palace insider said, “to do it at the club’s former home.” Crystal Palace Park, of course, also staged the FA Cup final between 1895 and 1914.

After several days of negotiations – no plans for the victory parade were announced even as Palace played their last home fixture of the season on Tuesday evening – eventually the club had to come up with their alternative plan. “What a let down,” one Palace fan said. And that was putting it mildly.

The club’s official website has been reported to be “in meltdown” this morning, as tens of thousands of loyal Eagles fans attempted to log on to book their tickets for a place in the stadium on Monday. There is no ticketing required to line the open-top bus parade route down Whitehorse Lane.

“It’s the day you’ve long been waiting for,” the Crystal Palace website announced. “Palace’s open-top bus parade will transport your FA Cup-winning heroes, and the historic trophy itself, down the SE25 streets starting at the top of Whitehorse Lane.”

That parade is due to begin at 1pm on May 26, and is expected to take 45minutes.

“Be there to bring the noise, and celebrate with Oliver Glasner’s outstanding Eagles as they show off our legendary prize…

“This will then feed into a party on the pitch at Selhurst Park from [2.30pm]: live entertainment, special guests, end-of-season awards – and maybe even a trophy lift or two – await.

“The event inside Selhurst will be free, but ticketed; supporters can either book standing tickets on the famous Selhurst Park pitch, or take their seats in the Main Stand, Holmesdale Road Stand or Whitehorse Lane.

“When you’re there, grab a drink, some food – and get ready to celebrate your 2025 FA Cup-winning heroes, South London style.”

There’s even a chance that Croydon Mayor Jason Perry will have to get in the ticket queue along with everyone else.

Read our match report from Wembley: A dream becomes reality: Wembley shook and it was beautiful
Read more: We’re South London and very, very proud of our FA Cup team
Read more: Palace record-breaker Joel Ward: This is merely ‘See you later’


A D V E R T I S E M E N T


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About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
This entry was posted in Croydon Council, Crystal Palace FC, Eberechi Eze, Football, Mayor Jason Perry, Oliver Glasner, Steve Parish and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

20 Responses to Cup-winners Palace snub Perry over Town Hall victory parade

  1. Sam Olvier says:

    Putting the open top coach through Croydon Town Centre would be an embarassment to the world…. its almost like a 3 rd world country and Perry wants free publicity for Croydon Town Centre ? Guy is deluded and fat boy would probably do a John Terry and lift the trophy like he scored the winning goal himself !

  2. Jim Lennon says:

    Crystal Palace FC has many supporters in Croydon but is not exclusively a Croydon club. I can understand why CPFC selected the stadium as the end point.

  3. Jim Bush says:

    Problems with local councils?! The club (wisely) don’t want to go anywhere near the losers at Croydon Council, and wanted to go to their original home in Crystal Palace Park, but that is in LB of Bromley and Bromley Council vetoed that plan !
    At least the rain on Monday shouldn’t be heavy enough to create a rarely-seen river down Whitehorse Lane for the very short parade route.

    • Paul Hepden says:

      Crystal Palace Park is owned by Croydon, Bromley and Lambeth councils equally and that’s why the Crystal Palace has never been rebuilt as the three councils can never come to an agreement

      • There’s a technical expression for that comment: it’s bollocks.

        • Ian Kierans says:

          Very true but here is a question – If the park had of come to Croydon how long would it have taken for the borough to have flogged it ( or parts of it) off and/or cut the support to maintenance charities and any other user enerting the park? At least the park in the trust may have a better chance than many other gems for public use flogged/leased off by being in a trust than elsewhere? Still the parade would be nice.

          • In many respects, that’s exactly what happened to the park when placed in Bromley’s charge. A chunk of parkland was recently sold for housing development, supposedly with profits helping towards the restoration budget. Good job Brick by Brick are not involved…

            Crystal Palace Park was always a strategic authority, London-wide open space, too much of a burden for a single borough. From Day One, Bromley resented the imposition and neglected the park, as well as their role with the sports centre. Thus it became another casualty of Thatcherite dogma.

      • Nick Goy says:

        Crystal Palace Park was ‘bought for the Nation’ with the demise of the Crystal Palace Company.

        It was ‘owned’ by the LCC, which in 1965 became the GLC and in 1986 when Mrs T abolished the GLC ownership transferred to Bromley Council solely.

        Bromley Council delegated stewardship of the park a year or two ago to the CPP Trust.

        No other local authorities are co-owners.

        The history of the former site of the CP with the dubious proposals, would take a lengthy article.

  4. The journey from the end of Whitehorse Lane to Selhurst Park via Park Road is less than three quarters of a mile, yet is expected to take 45 minutes. That’s about one mile an hour.

    Compare that to what Spurs are laying on for their UEFA Europa League celebrations. With support from both Enfield and Haringey councils, they’re having a 3 mile hike from Edmonton Green to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, which they expect to last 60 to 90 minutes.

    Pathetic ain’t the word

  5. Haydn White says:

    A bit dog in the manger from Bromley Council

  6. Phillip Kenny says:

    The locals over the years have had to put up with a lot of noise, litter and hooliganism when there has been music festivals in Crystal Palace park.Just when we have something happy to celebrate with the Eagles winning the FA cup Bromley council have kicked us in the teeth by not allowing the celebrations there.
    We know what to do now when they come cap in hand asking to support any of their proposed activities and developments in the park.

  7. Phil Swallow says:

    Good old Palace – we’re back!

  8. Brian Finegan says:

    The shortened parade is going to be wild! Everyone come along to the party.

  9. Dave Large says:

    Bit rubbish. I was hoping for Croydon town hall. CPFC must hate Perry more than the rest of us!

  10. Tom Clark says:

    Bromley and Lambeth council must NEVER be allowed to be associated with the CRYSTAL PALACE FOOTBALL CLUB EVER AGAIN!

  11. I didn’t know they were really ever associated, but it will be a bit of a problem with Palace’s Training Ground if they are not.
    Whatever is going on here it is a humiliation for the prestige of Croydon Council that it cannot reward with some form of civic reception the passing of a unprecedented major sporting event within it’s boundaries.

  12. Jim says:

    Good – that useless fat sack of crap Perry must never be allowed to steal credit for anything. He’s run the council into the ground, staffed with useless, lazy incompetents.

  13. Magnus Sorensen says:

    As someone who cares a lot about CPFC and wanting Croydon to improve, I think it’s more than a shame that the parade isn’t involving central Croydon. If for nothing else there would have been positive news for the area for once, for a place so often associated with negativity. Personally I think all the stops should have been pulled out to make it happen. This FA Cup win was a real throwback which captured some global attention and it’s just another obvious case of what should have been.

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