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The Bill Nicholson, Upper Edmonton, N17

102 Northumberland Park
N17
N17 0TS

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Reviews (Current Rating Average: of 10) Add Review see review guidelines


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Steve of N21 left this review about The Bill Nicholson

Known colloquially as ‘The Nick’, this is a very attractive public house being a fine example of a traditional Victorian pub, with a CAMRA listed interior and decor supporting a fine collection of local black and white prints, comfortable furniture and an excellent array of well kept real ales and continental lagers..
Only Joking !
The Bill Nick is a one bar fizzy pop sports and disco barn, with girls who your mother warned you about performing on the stage and the pole on the bar top area, and clientele are the type attracted by this type of establishment. Oh all right, that was me for yesterday’s end of season bash.
Make sure you’ve had your full set of inoculations before entering, especially on match days when the toilets are only for those who have a strong stomach, and there are ‘shot girls’ working the crowd to get you to part with a second mortgage for some indescribable firewater.
Nice display of Spurs memorabilia though as Roger mentions below.

On 2nd May 2010 - rating: 3
[User has posted 2111 recommendations about 1992 pubs]


Please Note: This review is over a year old.


Roger Button left this review about The Bill Nicholson

In 2005, the old Northumberland Arms underwent a major £150k image change that transformed it from a traditional Victorian boozer that struggled to cope with the match day hordes to a trendy Spurs themed bar that still struggles to cope with the matchday hordes. The Spurs connections with the pub are more intrinsic than a brush of paint – the pub was originally where the players changed in the days of taped crossbars and pipe smoking goalkeeprs.

The old pub décor and dated furnishings have now made way for a navy and white colour scheme and £25k worth of autographed shirts, boots, tickets and other Spurs memorabilia. A mass of old programmes run the entire length of one wall, lovingly organized like a keen philatelist with a prized stamp collection. Multiple screens show Spurs DVD’s and keep the pre-match crowds updated on the latest sports news. The bar staff wear matching matchday Spurs T-Shirts (Arse fans need not apply for vacancies here) and the only surprise is that neither of the teams on the table football game are in Spurs colours.

Sadly but predictably, the beers are pedestrian and mainstream with no Real Ales; mass product beer for the mass crowds seems to be the motto. The old bar frame has been removed making the pub appear a lot more spacious even though it is still impossible to negotiate your way round the pub on match day. A marquee in the now cheaply tarmaced beer garden copes with the overflows as best as it can and a BBQ is usually sizzling away on the front terrace. Aside from a bit of football nostalgia, this pub will not appeal to many people beyond non-Ale drinking Spurs fans. They do have the occasional guest evening (speaker that is, not beer) hosted by former Spurs players. Bill Nick himself lived locally for virtually all of his life and I dare say he would have popped into the old Northumberland on one or two occasions but being such a humble and self effacing man, he would probably have felt a bit embarrassed in having the pub renamed in his honour, especially one that functions better as a museum than it does a pub.

On 23rd January 2010 - rating: 4
[User has posted 1239 recommendations about 1233 pubs]