Sitting in the West paddock Sat for the first time (normally R block but money's tight!). I've heard a rumour that there are no bars in SAR these days can anyone confirm this plse? Also where is Smutts?
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West Paddock has a small bar area. Queues can be long at half time but before kick off normally okay.
General Smuts is in Bloemfontein Road. Off the Uxbridge Road. If travelling into Shepherds Bush Market Station, it's about 3 roads past Loftus Road and a few minutes walk up. Others may have quicker routes.
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Thanks RussRanger. Used to drink in Springbok and the White Horse(UxbridgeRd I think) in the days before kids. Now thet're a lot older - so back to drinking before games!! Want to give Smutts a go!22nd February away v Charlton is the 40th Anniversary of my support of QPR and my first game. Away v Chelsea 3-3 23rd Feb 1974. 40 years of pure magic!!
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This site rates it a modest 1.4 out of 10
The General Smuts was a supremely scary place, located in the midst of the White City estate. Barely a night went by without a knife fight or someone being injured outside it. I used to work at the General Smuts at the time of the fall of the Berlin Wall which seemed appropriate as its location made the staff feel as if they were in a West Berlin surrounded by the dangerous East Germany of the White City estate. Each night I would have to take a different route ot work, yet still regularly had bottles chucked at my head. The second largest pub in London, its bars curiously divided precisely on ethnic grounds, with the public bar always being 99% West INdian and the Saloon bar being 99% Irish. In between its two bars, there was an off licence which I used to run and quite successfully - by giving the customers charm, something that they hadn't had at the pub for years, I ended up with queues up the street for people coming in to buy their kids a chocolate bar along with their cans of hard liquor. The unique feature of the off licence was that even if someone had been barred from the pub or anywhere else, they were always welcome in the off licence. I had people attack the three inch thick oak pillars that divided me from the public with clubs and baseball bats on more than one occasion. On the most part however, people were keen to remain calm as it was the absolutely last place left for many alcoholics where they could buy their booze. One evening, they held a romany wedding reception - the evening deteriorated so badly that it ended with two van loads of riot police turning up to drive them off the estate like some Medieval army.
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