LONDON — Chris Dixon's eyes welled up as he prepared to return to his seat.
From Upton Park to the Olympic Stadium, Dixon has been coming to West Ham games across seven decades. Nine months without being able to come to watch his beloved team has been agony.
"I never thought at my age I would get so excited about winning a ballot for a football match — it's been fantastic," the 71-year-old Dixon said. "All my supporter friends are gagging to get back. I'm quite emotional really. It gets in my throat. I really am so pleased to be back."
For the visit of Manchester United, Dixon was part of a landmark moment in English football. Never before had supporters been shut out of games for so long.
The east London stadium welcomed the first, very restricted crowd at a Premier League game since March when the coronavirus pandemic that has killed more than 61,000 in Britain forced unprecedented restrictions.
"Welcome home," read the message flashing on the stadium's exterior screen, although the players couldn't deliver on the field, losing 3-1 to United.
Only 2,000 fans were allowed into a stadium that can fit 60,000 on Saturday — after temperatures were checked and face coverings donned. Such is the lingering threat from COVID-19 which claimed another 397 lives in the 24 hours before the match.
But after months of matches in soulless empty stadiums, having a fan chorus once again for the Cockney club anthem "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" was a godsend.