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Official - Tottenham Have Good Hygiene

Jordinho

Ron Henry
Staff member
What health inspectors found at Premier League football grounds

Mice, uncooked chicken and out of date turkey are just some of the hygiene nasties that health inspectors have discovered at Premier League football grounds.

The two most recent environmental reports from teams in the top tier of English football have revealed some surprising findings.

An inspection of Manchester United's stadium Old Trafford discovered that the club has previously had to deal with the presence of rodents.

The report, which also found a broken tap and flaking pipework, instructed them to "continue to monitor and react to the mouse activity".


At St Mary’s Stadium, home of the Saints, Southampton were instructed to clean one of their ceilings, refill a soap dispenser and sort out a gap in a floor which provided potential access for pests.

The information, which was obtained through Freedom of Information requests, also highlighted some other interesting discoveries.

Swansea City were guilty of serving ready cooked chicken that was still pink, leaving an open packet of ham in a kitchen and allowing some pate to go out of date.

At Fulham's ground, Craven Cottage, an open box of bread rolls was left out under a wash basin, while Reading FC were told to clean out the dead insects and cobwebs in a drinks area.

But for many other teams in the league, such as Aston Villa, Wigan, QPR and West Ham, it was just smaller issues such as temperature control and general cleaning that were highlighted.

And reigning champions Emirates Marketing Project were given top marks, with the inspector writing there was "very good hygiene standards in place".

In response to the report Manchester United said they had a "robust pest control system" and that if any incidents do occur they take "immediate and appropriate action".

HOW THE CLUBS FARED:

Arsenal - The London club scored top marks with inspectors with no contraventions of legislation witnessed;

Aston Villa - The Villains were picked up on maintaining temperature control, a lack of water being provided to certain units and a leaking drain pipe;

Chelsea - Health inspectors detailed how out of date turkey saddles were almost served, how frozen pies were not correctly labelled and also expressed concerns about the sale stockpot. But it seems the warning was taken, as a follow up inspection recorded hygiene being generally excellent;

Everton - High standards of food hygiene and safety were noted by the inspectors;

Fulham - Areas of concern shared with Fulham included an open box of bread rolls under a basin, a hole in a wall which could have given access to pests, and a pair of rusty scissors;

Liverpool - Like their Merseyside neighbours, Liverpool showed good standards and procedures;

Emirates Marketing Project - The Premier League champions were noted for their very good standards and no action was required;

Manchester Utd - The Red Devils were criticised for flaking paintwork and concerns were raised about the presence of rodents, with the report instructing the club to continue to monitor and react to the mouse activity;

Saudi Sportswashing Machine - No problems were discovered by inspectors at St James's Park with good standards observed;

Norwich City - no response;

Queens Park Rangers - A few minor problems were found at Loftus Road such as a few loose taps, no hot water to a hand basin and low lighting in certain areas;

Reading - Health inspectors found dead insects and cobwebs at the Madejski Stadium, which they instructed the club to clean away, as well as a hole in a ceiling and rubbish behind the PG Tips table;

Southampton - Southampton were instructed to clean one of their ceilings, refill a soap dispenser and sort out a gap in a floor which provided potential access for pests;

Stoke City - The Potters were told to clean a dirty vacuum packer and take action on some pouches for vacuum packing that were stored in a dirty box;

Sunderland - The inspection found the Stadium of Light to comply with hygiene and food legislation;

Swansea City - Some of the issues highlighted by the reports included chicken being served that was still pink, out of date watercress, out of date pate and an open packet of cooked ham left in a kitchen;

Tottenham Hotspur - Tottenham scored well in the report with food hygiene being recorded as well managed;

West Bromwich Albion - Top marks for West Brom as hygiene standards were recorded as being very high;

West Ham United - Not many problems were discovered at Upton Park with inspectors just instructing some extractor filters to be cleaned and to replace a missing ceiling tile;

Wigan Athletic - High standards were noted at Wigan with the report just telling them to ensure temperatures were recorded properly.


http://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/10158701.What_health_inspectors_found_at_Premier_League_football_grounds/
 
Do Arsenal count their remarks as a silverwear ??

Arsenal - The London club scored top marks with inspectors with no contraventions of legislation witnessed;
 
Manchester Utd - The Red Devils were criticised for flaking paintwork and concerns were raised about the presence of rodents, with the report instructing the club to continue to monitor and react to the mouse activity;

:ross:
 
Given the trouble we've had with food poisoning in the past, I'm not surprised our hygiene is top notch.
 
Good to hear we aren't serving horse in our burgers but our catering is still pitiful, far far too slow and means that our club aren't generating the revenue it should be.

We have the equivalent of one vending machine serving each stand (pretty much) so hardly surprising we are nice and clean.
 
Arsenal - The London club scored top marks with inspectors with no contraventions of legislation witnessed;

They didn't see it. :lol:

Manchester Utd - The Red Devils were criticised for flaking paintwork and concerns were raised about the presence of rodents, with the report instructing the club to continue to monitor and react to the mouse activity;

Was this before or after Gary Neville retired.
 
Tottenham Hotspur blasted after mouse droppings and insects found in club kitchen

Burgers and hot dogs left out of fridge and hand sanitiser labelled as 'degreaser' as Spurs are slammed by council inspection


Tottenham Hotspur may have sat comfortably mid-table in last season's Premier League fair play table - but in the food hygiene league they were one of the dirtiest.

Spurs say they've taken steps to clean up their act ahead of the new season after a shocking report found MOUSE DROPPINGS in their kitchens.

Council health chiefs also found insects where the club prepare food in an inspection by Haringey Council, reports the Sun.

The report also even stated that staff who worked to prepare meals ahead of Premier League games "weren't sure if they had washed their hands".

Haringey Council’s food health and hygiene officer said: “Mice droppings were noted behind chilled units, under sink shelving units and a behind door in the main kitchen.

“It was apparent that the level of food hygiene awareness amongst Tottenham Hotspur staff was inadequate.”

And the proverbial yellow card was shown when the inspection found hand sanitiser wrongly put in a dispenser labelled as 'degreaser.'

The tale of woe continued with old food found encrusted on dirty kitchen tools plus evidence of the same surfaces used to prepare raw and cooked foods – increasing the risk of cross-contamination.

Knowledge on food hygiene was also of Conference standard with high-risk foods like burgers, hot dogs and desserts not kept in fridges.

The inspector demanded: “The food must not be displayed again at room temperature.”

All this gave the North London club a pal Food Standards Agency score of 3/5. This means their food preparation is generally satisfactory.

Tottenham say the council are now happy with the changes they have made.

A club spokesman told the Sun: “This report is from six months ago. At the time, we intervened to work with the local authorities to ensure our contract caterers resolved all issues immediately.

“We have since invited the local authorities back to the stadium to re-inspect and they were satisfied with the changes implemented. We continue to have a dialogue with them to ensure there is no repeat.”

Mirror Online approached Spurs for further comment.

http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/tottenham-hotspur-blasted-after-mouse-8579742
 
So this is stadium catering, not the first team, phew!

I don't understand why the catering at whl is so bad, huge queues to get terrible food.

It is so easy to pre-prepare burgers hot dogs and sarnies, then dish them out for a flat fee. Just put queues saying hot dog etc and get the money ready, pound coins only, bang bang bang. Seconds. I reckon half or more potential customers don't buy as the queues and product are so poor.

Spurs save a few grand by cutting corners but lose ten times that in revenue... Not to mention that average 2nd rate bench players earn that in a week. Just sort it out ffs.

Easy to have piles of pork rolls, wraps, Mexican, burgers, hotdogs, you've got 15 mins to pull in £100,000 go go go!
 
Contracted catering always has problems at events that only offer work for short periods on occasional days. The staff aren't properly trained and those employed keep changing, unless the management of the company get involved at point of delivery standards drop.
 
well i read on the internet that organic environments and less use of antibacterial stuff and builds immunity.
 
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