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Home UK Craft Beer

Joseph Holt, toasting football rivalry in welcoming pubs

Darren Norbury by Darren Norbury
16 April 2026
in UK Craft Beer
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Football fans will be braced for one of the key matches of the season when Manchester City host Premier League leaders Arsenal this weekend.

Ellie Half Way House
Ellie Ori, landlady of the Halfway House, in Droylsdon

When it comes to choosing a pub to watch a match or before a game, a combination of location and loyalty usually determine the venue. Yet pubs belonging to the independent Manchester-based Joseph Holt brewery are quietly doing the opposite: deliberately encouraging rival fans together on match days.

Nowhere is this more evident than the Halfway House, in Droylsden. For while it may be a ‘blue pub’ and a magnet for  Manchester City supporters — especially for big home fixtures — as landlady Ellie Ori points out, it’s also a place where competing fans are not just welcome, but actively encouraged.

“We understand that however much you love your club, you can still have a pint with someone who might support a rival,” said Ellie. “It’s about coming together over the atmosphere. Whether people are heading to the match or watching it here, there’s always banter and post-match analysis.”

It’s a philosophy Ellie understands first-hand. She’s a staunch City fan; her partner and co-licensee, Peter Scott, supports Leeds United. “It’s always a talking point,” she laughed. “That friendly rivalry is part of the atmosphere. I even put on sandwiches at half-time so everyone comes together.”

Elsewhere in Manchester, other Joseph Holt pubs following a similar theme include the Frigate, in Whitefield, which has become a particular favourite with Newcastle United supporters — even though it’s hundreds of miles from Tyneside.

“A few years ago, their supporters’ club rang to ask whether their fans would be welcome when Newcastle were playing Manchester United at Old Trafford,” said landlady Lisa Moran. “Of course, the answer was yes. In fact we made them so welcome they nearly missed the match because they were having such a good time. Now they love to come here for United games.”

Keg Warehouse banner 2

And for Danielle McIntosh, pub manager of the Bricklayers Arms — within shouting distance of Old Trafford — the secret ingredient of opposing fans drinking together is simple: banter.

The pub has long been a haunt for die-hard United fans without tickets, or those gathering for a pint before and after the game. Danielle, who has worked there since she was 18 and who has been landlady for the past eight years, says the atmosphere is carefully nurtured.

“The banter is brilliant because it’s funny, it’s never aggressive,” she said. “Of course, people are tribal about football. But the atmosphere works because we make sure everyone feels welcome, whatever their loyalty. It’s shared ground in our pub, because everyone is sharing the experience of enjoying the football.”

Mark Norbury, director of pubs at Joseph Holt, added: “Football can be fiercely divisive — loyalties run deep, and that’s understandable. But our pubs are for everyone. Sport sparks passion, yes, but it’s the banter, the atmosphere, and the shared excitement that let everyone enjoy the game together, and that’s why our pubs are such welcoming places to watch a match, whichever side you support.”

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